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As You Sow, So Shall You Reap: Gender-Role Attitudes and Late-Life Cognition

Bonsang, Éric; Skirbekk, Vegard; Staudinger, Ursula M. (2017), As You Sow, So Shall You Reap: Gender-Role Attitudes and Late-Life Cognition, Psychological Science, 28, 9, p. 1201-1213. 10.1177/0956797617708634

Type
Article accepté pour publication ou publié
Date
2017
Journal name
Psychological Science
Volume
28
Number
9
Publisher
Sage
Pages
1201-1213
Publication identifier
10.1177/0956797617708634
Metadata
Show full item record
Author(s)
Bonsang, Éric

Skirbekk, Vegard
University of the District of Columbia
Staudinger, Ursula M.
University of the District of Columbia
Abstract (EN)
Some studies have found that women outperform men in episodic memory after midlife. But is this finding universal, and what are the reasons? Gender differences in cognition are the result of biopsychosocial interactions throughout the life course. Social-cognitive theory of gender development posits that gender roles may play an important mediating role in these interactions. We analyzed country differences in the gender differential in cognition after midlife using data from individuals age 50 and above (N = 226,661) from 27 countries. As expected, older women performed relatively better in countries characterized by more equal gender-role attitudes. This result was robust to cohort differences as well as reverse causality. The effect was partially mediated by education and labor-force participation. Cognition in later life thus cannot be fully understood without reference to the opportunity structures that sociocultural environments do (or do not) provide. Global population aging raises the importance of understanding that gender roles affect old-age cognition and productivity.
Subjects / Keywords
cognition; country differences; gender-role attitudes; later life
JEL
J14 - Economics of the Elderly; Economics of the Handicapped; Non-Labor Market Discrimination
J16 - Economics of Gender; Non-labor Discrimination

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