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Journal Article

Ride with Me - Ethnic Discrimination in Social Markets

Authors

  • Tjaden
  • J.D.
  • Schwemmer
  • C.
  • Khadjavi
  • M.

Publication Date

DOI

doi.org/10.1093/esr/jcy024

Key Words

computational social science

Ethnic discrimination

online markets

statistical discrimination

taste-based discrimination

Related Topics

Behavioral Economics

Germany

We study ethnic discrimination in Europe’s largest carpooling marketplace. Using a unique dataset with more than 17,000 rides, we estimate the effects of drivers’ perceived name origins on the demand for rides. Carpooling is a novel application for studying ethnic discrimination where consumer choice entails social interaction with the service provider (i.e. driver). We find large discrimination effects for drivers with Arab, Turkish or Persian sounding names. Further analyses support assumptions consistent with statistical discrimination. Our findings broaden the perspective of ethnic discrimination by shedding light on subtle, everyday forms of discrimination in social markets and fuel ongoing discussions about anti-discrimination efforts in an era in which markets increasingly move online.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Dr. Menusch Khadjavi
    Kiel Institute Fellow

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