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Experimental evidence on how implicit racial bias affects risk preferences

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  • Auer, Daniel

    (University of Bern)

  • Ruedin, Didier

    (University of Neuchâtel)

Abstract

We ask how human behavior changes when racial discrimination is costly and when choices are risky. By asking N = 4,944 participants in Germany to form a soccer team in a series of online experiments, we measure decision-making in an accessible way. Higher costs of discrimination can reduce disparities, but we show that these costs can also trigger implicit racial bias: participants who received an additional financial incentive to select more skilled soccer players outperformed nonincentivized participants and differentiated less based on skin color. However, when confronted with risky choices in a lottery, incentivized participants are more likely to gamble to avoid players with a darker skin color. That is, racial (minority) markers alter the risk preferences of people when their decisions carry costly consequences. This implicit racial bias may partly explain why members of visible minority groups are regularly discriminated against in real-world competitive markets.

Suggested Citation

  • Auer, Daniel & Ruedin, Didier, 2023. "Experimental evidence on how implicit racial bias affects risk preferences," SocArXiv wrebf, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:wrebf
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/wrebf
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Daniel Auer & Flavia Fossati, 2019. "The absent rewards of assimilation: how ethnic penalties persist in the Swiss labour market," The Journal of Economic Inequality, Springer;Society for the Study of Economic Inequality, vol. 17(2), pages 285-299, June.
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    9. Daniel Auer & Flavia Fossati, 2019. "The absent rewards of assimilation: how ethnic penalties persist in the Swiss labour market," The Journal of Economic Inequality, Springer;Society for the Study of Economic Inequality, vol. 17(2), pages 285-299, June.
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