Publication details

The Gender Gap in the Care Economy Is Larger in Highly Developed Countries : Sociocultural Explanations for Paradoxical Findings

Authors

BLOCK Katharina OLSSON Maria I. T. VAN GROOTEL Sanne SCHUSTER Carolin MEEUSSEN Loes VAN LAAR Colette MARTINY Sarah CROFT Alyssa SUN Molly Shuyi WEE Sheila AINSAAR Mare AARNTZEN Lianne ADAMUS Magdalena ANDERSON Joel ATKINSON Ciara AVICENNA Mohamad BABEL Przemyslaw BARTH Markus BENSON-GREENWALD Tessa M. MALOKU Edona BERENT Jacques BERGSIEKER Hilary B. BIERNAT Monica BIRNEANU Andreea G. BODINAKU Blerta BOSAK Janine BOSSON Jennifer BRANKOVIC Marija BURKAUSKAS Julius CAVOJOVA Vladimira CHERYAN Sapna CHOI Eunsoo CHOI Incheol CONTRERAS-IBANEZ Carlos C. COOGAN Andrew DANYLIUK Ivan DAR-NIMROD Ilan DASGUPTA Nilanjana DE LEMUS Soledad DEVOS Thierry DIAB Marwan DIEKMAN Amanda B. EFREMOVA Maria EISNER Leila ELLER Anja ERENTAITE Rasa FEDAKOVA Denisa FRANC Renata GARTZIA Leire GAVRELIUC Alin GAVRELIUC Dana GECAITE-STONCIENE Julija GERMANO Adriana L. GIOVANNELLI Ilaria GISMONDI DIAZ Renzo GITIKHMAYEVA Lyudmila MENKIR GIZAW Abiy GJONESKA Biljana GONZALEZ Omar Martinez GONZALEZ Roberto GRIJALVA Isaac David GUNGOR Derya GUSTAFSSON SENDEN Marie HALL William HARB Charles HASSAN Bushra HASSLER Tabea HAWI Diala R. HENNINGSEN Levke HOPPE Annedore ISHII Keiko JAKSIC Ivana JASINI Alba JURKEVICIENE Jurgita KELMENDI Kaltrina KIRBY Teri A. KITAKAJI Yoko KOSAKOWSKA-BEREZECKA Natasza KOZYTSKA Inna KULICH Clara KUNDTOVÁ KLOCOVÁ Eva KUNUROGLU Filiz LAPYTSKAIA AIDY Christina LEE Albert ENEROTH Anna LOPEZ-LOPEZ Wilson LUZVINDA Liany MARICCHIOLO Fridanna MARTINOT Delphine MCNAMARA Rita Anne MEISTER Alyson MELKA Tizita Lemma MICKUVIENE Narseta MIRANDA-ORREGO Maria Isabel MKAMWA Thadeus MORANDINI James MORTON Thomas MRISHO David NIKITIN Jana OTTEN Sabine PACILLI Maria Giuseppina PAGE-GOULD Elizabeth PERANDRES-GOMEZ Ana PIZARRO Jon POP-JORDANOVA Nada PYRKOSZ-PACYNA Joanna QOUTA Samir RAMIS Tamilselvan RANI Nitya REDERSDORFF Sandrine REGNER Isabelle RENSTROM Emma A. RIVERA-RODRIGUEZ Adrian ROCHA-SANCHEZ Tania E. RYABICHENKO Tatiana SAAB Rim SAKATA Kiriko SAMEKIN Adil SANCHEZ-PACHECHO Tracy SCHEIFELE Carolin SCHULMEYER Marion K. SCZESNY Sabine SIRLOPU David SMITH-CASTRO Vanessa SOO Kadri SPACCATINI Federica STEELE Jennifer R. STEFFENS Melanie C. SUCIC Ines VANDELLO Joseph VELASQUEZ-DIAZ Laura Maria VINK Melissa VIVES Eva WARKINEH Turuwark Zalalam ZEZELJ Iris ZHANG Xiaoxiao ZHAO Xian SCHMADER Toni

Year of publication 2025
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGIST
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Arts

Citation
Doi https://doi.org/10.1037/amp0001512
Keywords gender differences; communal values; national gender roles; career interest; gender equality paradox
Attached files
Description Despite the growing demand for care economy employees (e.g., nurses, teachers, and social workers), men remain underrepresented in these careers. While economically developed countries support more equal rights for women and men, their labor markets are highly gender segregated (Charles, 1992, 2003). We conducted a focused investigation of this paradoxical pattern in the care economy, testing whether gender gaps in care economy career interest are larger in more economically developed countries and, if so, what psychological and cultural factors underlie these patterns. We examined these questions with labor data from 70 countries (Study 1) and a preregistered study of career interests among 19,240 university students from 49 countries (Study 2). Although more economically developed countries tend to promote greater gender equality, our results reveal that the gender gap in care economy representation (Study 1) and interest (Study 2) is especially large in such countries. We did not observe parallel patterns for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics representation or interest. Results from Study 2 supported an integrated theoretical account of this development paradox in care economy interest: Cross-national variation in the gender gap in care economy interest was predicted by country-level variation in economic development and individualism/collectivism but not by self-expression values or country-level gender equality, countering prior (controversial) claims of a gender equality paradox. Furthermore, larger gender gaps in communal values (e.g., men's lower valuing of helping and caring for others) were a proximal predictor of larger gender gaps in care economy interest in highly economically developed countries.
Related projects:

You are running an old browser version. We recommend updating your browser to its latest version.

More info