Gender Differences in Risk Aversion Behavior: Case Study of Saudi Arabia and Jordan
Commenced in January 2007
Frequency: Monthly
Edition: International
Paper Count: 32807
Gender Differences in Risk Aversion Behavior: Case Study of Saudi Arabia and Jordan

Authors: Razan Salem

Abstract:

Men and women have different approaches towards investing, both in terms of strategies and risk attitudes. This study aims to focus mainly on investigating the financial risk behaviors of Arab women investors and to examine the financial risk tolerance levels of Arab women relative to Arab men investors. Using survey data on 547 Arab men and women investors, the results of Wilcoxon Signed-Rank (One-Sample) test Mann-Whitney U test reveal that Arab women are risk-averse investors and have lower financial risk tolerance levels relative to Arab men. Such findings can be explained by the fact of women's nature and lower investment literacy levels. Further, the current political uncertainty in the Arab region may be considered as another explanation of Arab women’s risk aversion behavior. The study's findings support the existing literature by validating the stereotype of “women are more risk-averse than men” in the Arab region. Overall, when it comes to investment and financial behaviors, women around the world behave similarly.

Keywords: Arab region, financial risk behavior, gender differences, women investors.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI): doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2702546

Procedia APA BibTeX Chicago EndNote Harvard JSON MLA RIS XML ISO 690 PDF Downloads 917

References:


[1] Grable, J. E. (2000). Financial risk tolerance and additional factors that affect risk taking in everyday money matters. Journal of Business and Psychology, 14(4), 625-630.
[2] Agnew, J. Balduzzi, P. & Sunden, A.(2003). Portfolio Choice and Trading in a Large 401(k) Plan. American Economic Review, 93, 193–215.
[3] Faff, R., Mulino, D., & Chai, D. (2008). On the linkage between inancial risk tolerance and risk aversion. Journal of financial research, 31(1), 1-23.
[4] Lusardi, A., & Mitchelli, O. (2007). Financial literacy and retirement preparedness: Evidence and implications for financial education. Business Economics, 42(1), 35-44.
[5] Barber, B. M., & Odean, T. (2001). Boys will be boys: Gender, overconfidence, and common stock investment. Quarterly journal of Economics, 261-292.
[6] Croson, R., & Gneezy, U. (2009). Gender Differences in Preferences. . Journal of Economic Literature, 47 (2), 448–74.
[7] Powell, M., & Ansic, D. (1997). Gender differences in risk behaviour in financial decision-making: An experimental analysis. Journal of economic psychology, 18(6), 605-628.
[8] Jianakoplos, N. A., & Bernasek, A. (1998). Are Women more Risk Averse?. Economic Inquiry, 36 (4), 620-630.
[9] Sung, J. & Hanna, S. (1996). Factors related to risk tolerance. Financial Counseling and Planning, 7, 11-20.
[10] Yao, R., Gutter, MS & Hanna, SD (2005). The financial risk tolerance of Blacks, Hispanics and Whites. Journal of Financial Counseling and Planning, 16(1), 51-62.
[11] Charness, G., & Gneezy, U. (2012). Strong evidence for gender differences in risk taking. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 83(1), 50-58.
[12] Eckel, C. C., & Grossman, P. J. (2008). Men, women and risk aversion: Experimental evidence. Handbook of experimental economics results, 1, 1061-1073.
[13] Wang, H., & Hanna, S. D. (1997). Does risk tolerance decrease with age?. Financial Counseling and Planning, 8(2).
[14] World Bank Statistics. 2014. (online) Available at http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SL.TLF.CACT.FE.ZS/countries/1W-SA-1A-JO?display=graph (Accessed 2 March 2018).
[15] Haddad, R. (2013). A critical analysis of the experiences of female business owners in the development and management of tourism-related micro and small handicraft businesses in an Islamic society: The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. PHD Thesis, Bournemouth University.
[16] Booz & Company’s Ideation Center: Empowering Women Entrepreneurs in the Middle East (2014). (online) Available at http://cfi.co/africa/2014/05/booz-companys-ideation-center-empowering-women-entrepreneurs-in-the-middle-east/ (Accessed 7 March 2018) .
[17] William, J. (2011). Arab oil money: Empowering Women Available from: http://knowledge.insead.edu/INSEAD-knowledge-empowering-arab-women-111024.cfm. (Accessed 29th January 2018).
[18] Becker‐Blease, J. R., & Sohl, J. E. (2011). The effect of gender diversity on angel group investment. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 35(4), 709-733.
[19] Byrnes, J. P., Miller, D. C., & Schafer, W. D. (1999). Gender differences in risk taking: A meta-analysis. Psychological bulletin, 125(3), 367.
[20] Agnew, J. R., Anderson, L. R., Gerlach J. R., & Szykman, L. R. (2008). Who chooses annuities? An experimental investigation of the role of gender framing, and defaults. The American Economic Review, 98(2), 418-422.
[21] Borghans, L., Heckman, J. J., Golsteyn, B. H., & Meijers, H. (2009). Gender differences in risk aversion and ambiguity aversion. Journal of the European Economic Association, 7(2‐3), 649-658.
[22] Bajtelsmit, V. L., Bernasek, A., & Jianakoplos, N. A. (1999). Gender differences in defined contribution pension decisions. Financial Services Review, 8(1), 1-10.
[23] Mittal, M., & Vyas, R. (2011). A Study of Psychological Reasons for Gender Differences in Preferences for Risk and Investment Decision Making. The IUP Journal of Behavioral Finance, 8(3), 45-60..
[24] Hohnisch, M., Pittnauer, S., Selten, R., Pfingsten, A., & Eraßmy, J. (2014). Gender differences in decisions under profound uncertainty are non-robust to the availability of information on equally informed others’ decisions. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 108, 40-58.
[25] Statman, M. (2008). Countries and culture in behavioral finance. In CFA Institute Conference Proceedings Quarterly (Vol. 25, No. 3, pp. 38-44). CFA Institute.
[26] Al-Ajmi, J. Y. (2008). Risk tolerance of individual investors in an emerging market. International Research Journal of Finance and Economics, 17(1), 15-26.
[27] Roudi, F. (2011). Youth Population and Employment in the Middle East and North Africa: Opportunity or Challenge?. Population Reference Bureau.
[28] Prince, M. (1993). Women, men and money styles. Journal of economic Psychology, 14(1), 175-182.
[29] Anbar, A., & Eker, M. (2010). An empirical investigation for determining of the relation between personal financial risk tolerance and demographic characteristic. Ege Academic Review, 10(2), 503-523.
[30] Badunenko, O., Barasinska, N., & Schäfer, D. (2010). Is gender a good predictor of finan- cial risk taking? Evidence from na-tional surveys of household finance (No. 2010-5). Jönköping International Business School.
[31] Bannier, C. E., & Neubert, M. (2016). Gender differences in financial risk taking: The role of financial literacy and risk tolerance. Economics Letters.