Evidence of Unequal Treatment in Hiring Against Obese Applicants: A Field Experiment

29 Pages Posted: 16 May 2007

See all articles by Dan-Olof Rooth

Dan-Olof Rooth

University of Kalmar; IZA Institute of Labor Economics

Date Written: May 2007

Abstract

This study presents evidence of recruitment discrimination against obese individuals in Sweden by sending fictitious applications to real job openings. Otherwise identical applications were randomly assigned a portrait photograph of an obese or a normal weight job applicant. Applications with an obese applicant receive twenty percent fewer callbacks for an interview. It is also found that discrimination is the same against men and women and that it varies across occupations in a systematic way in that firms hiring employees in occupations with more customer contact discriminate more. The tentative conclusion is that customer discrimination and/or statistical discrimination based on the correlation between job performance and being obese is the explanation. Also, opposite to what is expected, register data show that the share of obese employees is higher in occupations were discrimination is found to be higher.

Keywords: obesity, discrimination, correspondence testing

JEL Classification: J64, J71

Suggested Citation

Rooth, Dan-Olof, Evidence of Unequal Treatment in Hiring Against Obese Applicants: A Field Experiment (May 2007). IZA Discussion Paper No. 2775, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=986342 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.986342

Dan-Olof Rooth (Contact Author)

University of Kalmar ( email )

Sweden

IZA Institute of Labor Economics

Schaumburg-Lippe-Str. 7 / 9
Bonn, D-53072
Germany

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