6533b834fe1ef96bd129d60d
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Discrimination in the sharing economy: evidence from a Hungarian field experiment
Hannah TaylorIryna ShvetsBori Simonovitssubject
Car sharinggenetic structuresSociology and Political ScienceArabic05 social sciencesEconomics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)Ethnic group050109 social psychologylanguage.human_languageSocial researchstomatognathic systemSociologySharing economy0502 economics and businesslanguageNationality0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEthnic discriminationPsychologySocial psychology050203 business & managementSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)description
Findings from our pilot research project which focused on providing car sharing services to young people with different ethnic/racial background showed discrimination against certain ethnic groups. The research was based on a controlled field experimental design to examine the chances of rides being offered to racially different testers. The experimental variables were both race and gender. Creating altogether 8 profiles enabled us to test the interaction between these two experimental stimulus. The small-scale research (total N=160) was implemented in Hungary, in summer 2017 by interns of TARKI, Hungarian Social Research Centre. The forthcoming article shows evidence of ethnic/racial disproportionality in offering ride to the different testers by multi-ethnic drivers. High effect size was detected in case of Arabic male tester (d=.87, p=.009) and medium effect in case of the Chinese male tester (d=.62, p=.059). In case of the Russian male profile and female testers of any nationality we did not detect evidence of racial or ethnic discrimination compared to our Dutch benchmark profile, however it has to be noted, that the numbers of observations were very low (N=20 for each profile) in our field experiment. Although the pattern is not clear, interaction effect was shown between gender and nationality; as a consequence of this interaction, the Arabic male tester had far lesser chance of being offered a ride compared to any other combination of gender and nationality.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018-06-26 | Corvinus Journal of Sociology and Social Policy |