Racial Disparities in the Sharing Economy: Evidence from More Than 100,000 Airbnb Hosts across 14 Countries

IF 2.1 Q3 BUSINESS Journal of the Association for Consumer Research Pub Date : 2022-09-27 DOI:10.1086/722700
Bastian Jaeger, Willem W. A. Sleegers
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Abstract

Sharing economy platforms, such as Airbnb, often requires (or strongly encourages) hosts to share personal information, such as names and profile photos. Previous research suggests that consumers rely on this information to discriminate against hosts from racial minorities. If there is a preference for White hosts, then they should be able to charge higher prices for qualitatively similar rentals. We test this hypothesis using data from Airbnb. An analysis of 96,150 listings across 24 cities and 14 countries showed that non-White hosts charge approximately 2.5%–3% lower prices for qualitatively similar listings (study 1). A preregistered analysis of 12,648 listings across 14 cities in the United States showed that Black hosts charge approximately 5%–7% lower prices and Asian hosts charge approximately 4%–6% lower prices for similar listings (study 2). These findings support the hypothesis that consumers show a preference for White hosts, which allows White hosts to charge higher prices.
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共享经济中的种族差异:来自14个国家超过10万名Airbnb房东的证据
Airbnb等共享经济平台通常要求(或强烈鼓励)房东共享个人信息,如姓名和个人资料照片。先前的研究表明,消费者依赖这些信息来歧视少数种族的主持人。如果有人喜欢白人房东,那么他们应该能够对质量相似的租金收取更高的价格。我们使用Airbnb的数据来检验这一假设。对24个城市和14个国家的96150个房源的分析显示,非白人房东对质量相似的房源收取的价格约低2.5%至3%(研究1)。一项针对美国14个城市12648个房源的预注册分析显示,黑人房东的价格比亚裔房东低约5%-7%,亚裔房东的类似房源价格比亚裔低约4%-6%(研究2)。这些发现支持了这样一种假设,即消费者对白色宿主表现出偏好,这使得白色宿主可以收取更高的价格。
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来源期刊
Journal of the Association for Consumer Research
Journal of the Association for Consumer Research Economics, Econometrics and Finance-Economics and Econometrics
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
7.70%
发文量
54
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