Sucky stuff in re women at work: link roundup

“The current study has implications for group decisions in general, and jury deliberations in particular, by suggesting that expressing anger might lead men to gain influence, but women to lose influence over others (even when making identical arguments).”

“The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.”
Woman in a Meeting: “I have to say — I’m sorry — I have to say this. I don’t think we should be as scared of non-fear things as maybe we are? If that makes sense? Sorry, I feel like I’m rambling.”

“[Jennifer Lawrence] says that she blamed herself for not negotiating harder but also explores why it was she didn’t push that hard. Admitting that it’s “difficult to speak about my experience as a working woman because I can safely say my problems aren’t exactly relatable” — she was negotiating over millions of dollars — she speaks to a dynamic that is all-too-relatable to the rest of us non-millionaire women too.”

“Faculty participants rated the male applicant as significantly more competent and hireable than the (identical) female applicant.”

Results across experiments showed that men evaluate the gender-bias research less favorably than women, and, of concern, this gender difference was especially prominent among STEM faculty (experiment 2). These results suggest a relative reluctance among men, especially faculty men within STEM, to accept evidence of gender biases in STEM.”

Abrasive alone was used 17 times to describe 13 different women, but the word never appeared in men’s reviews. In fact, this type of character critique that was absent from men’s reviews showed up in 71 of the 94 critical reviews received by women.”

creating survey data for once

I have been using survey data in my work for about 2 decades, and I finally get the chance to submit information for a survey! I must say that it doesn’t seem as random as it’s supposed to be.

ACS

We own a house in a predominately-black, largely low income neighborhood, and we were asked to fill out a questionnaire for the American Crime Survey. Hm. And the request came with a crisp two dollar bill.

making maps in R

This map plots grocery stores with at least 30 employees, as of 2008. The map begins with a black and white Google terrain map and plots locations by latitude and longitude coordinates. I am working on getting more current data, but I can say that the food deserts haven’t changed much.

phlgrocer2008

Here’s the code I used. This requires the ggmap library.

qmap(“philadelphia”, zoom = 12, maptype=”terrain”, color=”bw”) +
geom_point(data=grocer, aes(x=long, y=latitude), colour=”blue”, alpha=.9,
size=4) +
labs(x=””, y=””, title=”Large Grocery Stores in 2008″) +
theme(plot.title = element_text(size=rel(1.8), face=”bold”, vjust=1.5,
family=”Times”), axis.ticks=element_blank(), axis.text.x=element_blank(),
axis.text.y=element_blank())

An economist speaks: the Pope is “spreading evil”

Pope Francis is in the midst of his first US visit. He’s already made some speeches and of course, some folks are unhappy with what he’s said. But I must say that I am surprised (though I shouldn’t be) that economists are taking him to task, particularly about his comments on the economy, regulation, and climate change. Most economists support cap and trade, while the Pope does not. Fair enough. Does that make him a socialist? At least one economist says yes. Oh, what would Adam Smith do?

Fear not, there will always be conservative economists to hold the invisible hand’s (invisible?) torch. Antony Davies (Duquesne) lambasts the Pope for his lack of economic training, because without that he apparently has no right to comment on the economy. According to Davies (from his own bully-pulpit), the Pope is a “typical politician” “spreading evil.” And then Davies blathers on and on about free-market capitalism, as measured by the Economic Freedom index. (He’s got a book he wants you to buy, which may be the primary motive behind his diatribe.)

Economic Freedom does have a significant relationship with GDP, as seen in this chart comparing OECD countries. So yes, higher per-capita GDP is a good thing, particularly if it comes with overall high well-being. (It’s worth noting that the countries with higher levels of freedom than us also have lower GDP, by the way.)

Does higher GDP make people happier? Yes, for the most part, but the story isn’t simple. Though we Americans enjoy really high per capita GDP relative to the rest of the world, we are not the happiest country. We know that the Scandinavians have cornered the happiness market, but folks in Venezuela, Costa Rica, Italy, and Saudi Arabia are about as happy as we are. Maybe an über-free market isn’t a silver bullet.

“The relationships between market freedoms and well-being are complex and not entirely understood, but the directional evidence is overwhelming. Any public figure — be he performer, politician, or pope — would do well to be aware of this evidence.” (Davies) Yes, the directional evidenceis clear. The correlation is positive. And that’s the level of nuance we’d expect from a student in an Econ101 class. What about the fact that this relationship is not linear? Life satisfaction increases with GDP at a decreasing rate. Even if we became “more free” economically, the true gains could be miniscule.

During his speech to Congress, Pope Francis said, “The right use of natural resources, the proper application of technology and the harnessing of the spirit of enterprise are essential elements of an economy which seeks to be modern, inclusive and sustainable.” On its face, that is not socialist rhetoric. And hey, I like the idea of a modern, inclusive, and sustainable economy. (I also like the Oxford comma.)

I can’t help but object to Davies’ condescending tone. I don’t think the Pope is above scrutiny (and I’m devoutly non-Catholic), but sheesh, his speech is not a doctoral thesis defense. A fortiori, if only economists may comment on the economy, and the majority of economists are politically conservative, how do we ensure a balanced perspective?

BIG government: Oh no, it might make us happy!

From Benjamin Radcliff and Michael Krassa:

“If you want to promote happiness, you should support government interventions.”

“the most important factors for happiness are social support, income security and health.”

Small government is bad for your pursuit of happiness

The political economy of human happiness