Racial Preferences in Dating: Evidence from a Speed Dating Experiment
Abstract
We examine racial preferences in dating. We employ a Speed Dating experiment that allows us to directly observe individual decisions and thus infer whose preferences lead to racial segregation in romantic relationships. Females exhibit stronger racial preferences than males. The richness of our data further allows us to identify many determinants of same-race preferences. Subjects' backgrounds, including the racial composition of the ZIP code where a subject grew up and the prevailing racial attitudes in a subject's state or country of origin, strongly influence same-race preferences. Older subjects and more physically attractive subjects exhibit weaker same-race preferences.
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Citation
Iyengar, Sheena, Raymond Fisman, and E. Kamenica. "Racial Preferences in Dating: Evidence from a Speed Dating Experiment." Review of Economic Studies 75, no. 1 (2008): 117-132.
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