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University Of Houston: Can Gender-Disposed Personality Traits Explain Who Initiates Salary Negotiations?
A University of Houston psychology researcher is reporting that the salary gap between men and women may be due to certain personality t ...
Laurie Fickman
August 9, 2021
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A University of Houston psychology researcher is reporting that the salary gap between men and women may be due to certain personality traits, specifically β assertiveness.Β
βWe found that women are higher in politeness and compassion than men, but neither of these personality traits were related to the propensity to initiate a negotiation,β reports Denise L. Reyes, assistant professor of psychology in the journalΒ Group Decision and Negotiation.Β βRather, assertiveness was positively related to initiating negotiations.βΒ
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The study extends the literature on individual differences and negotiation by testing how the βBig Fiveβ personality traits may contribute to salary negotiation initiation.Β Those traits includeΒ agreeableness, openness,Β conscientiousness, extraversion, and neuroticism. Her study included 246 full-time employees as participants.Β
Reyes also found gender differences inΒ initiatingΒ a negotiation depending on the gender of the negotiation counterpart.Β Β
βWe found that the gender difference in initiating negotiations (men are more likely to initiate than women) is larger when interacting with a male boss. However, rather than womenΒ initiatingΒ likeΒ men when they interacted with a female boss, itΒ turnedΒ out that menΒ initiatedΒ less when interacting with a female boss,β said Reyes.Β Β
In other words, women were unlikely toΒ initiateΒ a negotiation in either condition, but men differed based on the gender of the boss. Female bosses may be perceived as violating gender norms by holding a more agentic role as opposed to a more communal one.Β
βThis incongruence with gender norms may, in turn, decrease menβs comfort to negotiate with a woman supervisor,β said Reyes.Β Β
Despite the ever-present opportunity to negotiate wages in the professional world, thereΒ remainsΒ an obvious gender wage gap.Β The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics compared the median earnings of full-time wage and salary workers and found that, on average,Β women earned 83% of their male counterpartsβ compensation in 2014.Β Additionally, starting wages have been found to be higher for men than women.Β
βAn extensive body of work has identified the role of gender differences in initiating negotiation, however, there is scant research on individual differences that can explain who initiates and successfully performs negotiations,β said Reyes. βIn other words, although there is stark evidence of gender differences in initiating negotiations, there may also be interesting individual differences in the women who do initiate negotiations and the men who do not.βΒ
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This press release was produced by the University of Houston. The views expressed here are the authorβs own.