Repository logo
 

Discrimination without taste: how discrimination can spillover and persist

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Ramachandran, R 

Abstract

We introduce coordination failures driven by beliefs regarding the presence of taste discriminators as a channel of discrimination in productive activities requiring the input of multiple agents. We show that discrimination can persist under perfectly observable ability, when taste for discrimination has died out, and under absence of discriminatory social norms. Empirically we analyze the market for self employment - an activity commonly requiring inputs from multiple agents. Consistent with the theoretical predictions, beliefs about discrimination are a significant correlate of self-employment rates, as well as the cost and success of es- tablishing productive relations for blacks in the US.

Description

Keywords

Discrimination, Coordination failure, Beliefs, Inequality

Journal Title

SERIEs

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1869-4187
1869-4195

Volume Title

9

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC