Engendering Pluralism in Economics: Gendered Perspectives from an International Survey of Economists 

32 Pages Posted: 15 Oct 2025

Date Written: August 20, 2025

Abstract

This study contributes to growing calls for greater pluralism in economics by examining how gender shapes economists' normative and epistemological orientations. Drawing on original survey data from 2,425 economists across 19 countries, we document systematic gender differences in views on a broad range of issues. Female economists are significantly more likely to support progressive equity-oriented positions, challenge mainstream assumptions, and endorse pluralistic approaches to inquiry. We also find stark gender differences in political ideology: women are far more likely than men to identify as left-leaning-particularly far-left-while men disproportionately align with centrist or right-leaning ideologies. These ideological divides account for some of the gender differences in views, underscoring the mediating role of political ideology. However, the influence of ideology itself varies by gender: moving rightward on the ideological spectrum reduces support for some progressive positions more sharply among men than women. This suggests that gendered experiences inform distinct interpretive frameworks that persist even within shared ideological categories. Taken together, our findings highlight that gender diversity in economics is not merely demographic but epistemic—and that realizing its transformative potential requires institutional environments that value and legitimize dissenting and underrepresented perspectives.

Keywords: Gender Diversity, Economics Profession, Pluralistic Diversity, Political Ideology

JEL Classification: A11, A13, B54, J16, D63

Suggested Citation

Javdani, Mohsen, Engendering Pluralism in Economics: Gendered Perspectives from an International Survey of Economists  (August 20, 2025). Institute for New Economic Thinking Working Paper Series No. 238, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=5604291

Mohsen Javdani (Contact Author)

Simon Fraser University ( email )

School of Public Policy
515 West Hastings St.
Vancouver, British Columbia V6B 5K3
Canada

HOME PAGE: http://mohsenjavdani.com

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
39
Abstract Views
230
PlumX Metrics