摘要
This research aims to demonstrate that the abundant marketing data that companies are using to explore new business opportunities can be an equally fertile source for uncovering an undesirable social attitude or behavior that may be relevant to firms' business. Companies may benefit from this knowledge when developing innovative new programs that aim to benefit society, such as corporate social responsibility initiatives. In this study, we examine boy-girl gender discrimination in China as manifested in parents' purchase decisions on behalf of their children across different markets. Our study in itself is significant, because it is the first large-scale empirical work to clearly verify the phenomenon of boy-girl discrimination, taking advantage of e-commerce marketing data. Specifically, we compare the clothing expenditures on boys versus girls using a rich, household-specific data set obtained from two online retailers. We find that the patterns of gender inequality vary systematically across different geographic markets, as the relative expenditure difference on boys versus on girls is bigger in less developed areas as compared with metropolitan areas, and this relative expenditure difference is closely tied with socioeconomic conditions, education levels, and birth rates of a district. Managerial and social implications are discussed.
| 源语言 | 英语 |
|---|---|
| 页(从-至) | 1123-1146 |
| 期刊 | Marketing Science |
| 卷 | 40 |
| 期 | 6 |
| DOI | |
| 出版状态 | 已出版 - 2021 |
Project name
China Europe International Business School;;Project sponsor
National Social Science Fund of ChinaProject No.
7OTSO;;71972043联合国可持续发展目标
此成果有助于实现下列可持续发展目标:
-
可持续发展目标 5 性别平等
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可持续发展目标 12 负责任消费和生产
关键词
- boy-girl discrimination
- cause-related marketing
- corporate social responsibility
- gender inequality
成果物的来源
- FT
- ABDC-A*
- SSCI
指纹
探究 'Do "Little Emperors" Get More Than "Little Empresses"? Boy-Girl Gender Discrimination as Evidenced by Consumption Behavior of Chinese Households' 的科研主题。它们共同构成独一无二的指纹。科研成果
- 3 引用
- 1 工作论文
-
Do “Little Emperors” Get More than “Little Empresses”? Boy-girl Gender Discrimination as Evidenced by Consumption Behavior of Chinese Households(CEIBS Working Paper, No. 031/2020/MKT. 2020)
Lin, C., Chen, Y., Chiang, J. & Zhang, Y., 7月 2020.科研成果: 工作论文
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