Crossovers: Female Entrepreneurs Who Enter Male Sectors. Evidence from Ethiopia

Type Working Paper - Policy Research WP
Title Crossovers: Female Entrepreneurs Who Enter Male Sectors. Evidence from Ethiopia
Author(s)
Issue 8065
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2017
URL https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/bitstream/handle/10986/26757/WPS8065.pdf?sequence=1
Abstract
Occupational sector selection is an important determinant of returns for female entrepreneurs. If sectors that are traditionally male owned could provide an opportunity to earn higher returns, then what factors could encourage women to cross over into these sectors or prevent them from doing so? To examine this question, this paper uses data from Ethiopia to compare the firm performance and characteristics of women in male-dominated sectors (crossovers) with women who are in female-concentrated sectors (noncrossovers). The findings show that female-owned enterprises
in male-dominated sectors perform better on average than those in female-concentrated sectors, with firms achieving higher profits and having more employees. The descriptive results show that crossovers do not necessarily have
more education or greater skills than noncrossovers. Rather, women’s relationships and networks, especially those provided through male relatives, and being opportunity-driven entrepreneurs appear to influence the likelihood of entering a more-profitable, male-dominated sector. The study explores the implications and challenges of encouraging female entrepreneurs to enter male-dominated sectors, in an effort to provide new insight into how the earning gap between male and female entrepreneurs can be closed.

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