Evidence and perceptions of discrimination in restaurants

IF 2.3 3区 经济学 Q2 ECONOMICS
Graeme Pearce , Brit Grosskopf
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Abstract

We present a natural field experiment designed to examine price discrimination in retail markets. This is done by examining the portion sizes served in British Carvery Restaurants. Carvery restaurants serve traditional, fixed-price roast dinners, and are characterised by the manner in which customers are served: a single chef serves every customer individually and, under observation, cuts them a portion of meat from a roasted joint. We employed 147 testers to pose as diners. We find systematic variations in served meat quantities that correlate with the testers’ gender, with men receiving significantly more meat than women. The gender disparity in portion sizes is robust to controlling for a range of appearance and physical characteristics, and cannot be fully explained by women taking more vegetables or wasting more food than men in a complementary lab-in-the-field experiment. Responses to an online survey conducted via Prolific using a representative sample from the UK point towards a widely held belief that women eat less meat than men, suggesting that the observed discrepancies could stem from statistical discrimination. Evidence from a complementary framed-field experiment highlights how both women and men are negatively affected by this gender disparity. Furthermore, the Prolific survey reveals that neither gender believes serving less meat to women than men when they pay the same price is socially acceptable.
餐馆歧视的证据和认知
我们提出了一个自然现场实验,旨在检查零售市场的价格歧视。这是通过检查英国餐馆提供的份量来完成的。餐馆提供传统的固定价格的烤肉晚餐,其特点是为顾客服务的方式:一位厨师单独为每位顾客服务,并在观察下从烤关节上切下一部分肉。我们雇佣了147名测试者假扮食客。我们发现,上肉量的系统性变化与测试者的性别有关,男性吃的肉明显多于女性。在控制一系列外表和身体特征方面,份量上的性别差异是强有力的,不能完全用女性比男性吃更多的蔬菜或浪费更多的食物来解释。多产网站对来自英国的代表性样本进行了一项在线调查,调查结果表明,人们普遍认为女性比男性吃肉少,这表明观察到的差异可能源于统计歧视。一项补充性框架场实验的证据强调了男女如何受到这种性别差异的负面影响。此外,《多产》杂志的调查还显示,男女双方都不认为,在支付同样价格的情况下,给女性提供的肉比男性少是社会可以接受的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
9.10%
发文量
392
期刊介绍: The Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization is devoted to theoretical and empirical research concerning economic decision, organization and behavior and to economic change in all its aspects. Its specific purposes are to foster an improved understanding of how human cognitive, computational and informational characteristics influence the working of economic organizations and market economies and how an economy structural features lead to various types of micro and macro behavior, to changing patterns of development and to institutional evolution. Research with these purposes that explore the interrelations of economics with other disciplines such as biology, psychology, law, anthropology, sociology and mathematics is particularly welcome.
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