Search Results

SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Keywords:Leaky pipeline 

Working Paper
Measuring Inclusion: Gender and Coauthorship at the Federal Reserve Board

Relative to diversity, inclusion is much harder to measure. We measure inclusion of women in economics using novel data on coauthoring relationships among Federal Reserve Board economists. Individual coauthoring relationships are voluntary, yet inclusion in coauthoring networks can be central to research productivity and career success. We document gender affinity in coauthoring, with individuals up to 34 percent more likely to have a same-gender coauthor in the data relative to what would be predicted by random assignment. Because women account for under 30 percent of Federal Reserve Board ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2024-091

Working Paper
Gender Gaps in the Federal Reserve System

To better understand the stalled progress of women in economics, we construct new data on women's representation and research output in one of the largest policy institutions—the Federal Reserve System. We document a slight increase in women’s representation over the past 20 years, in line with academic trends. We also document a significant gender gap in research output, especially for years in which economists have greater domestic responsibilities, but nearly absent gender gaps in policy output and career progression. This work complements existing research on women in academia, ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2024-092

FILTER BY Content Type

FILTER BY Author

FILTER BY Jel Classification

A14 2 items

E58 2 items

J16 2 items

FILTER BY Keywords

Central banks 2 items

Diversity 2 items

Leaky pipeline 2 items

Coauthoring networks 1 items

Gender affinity 1 items

Gender inequality 1 items

show more (3)

PREVIOUS / NEXT