We study the disproportionate impact of the lockdown as a result of the COVID-19 outbreak on female and male academics' research productivity in social science. The lockdown has caused substantial disruptions to academic activities, requiring people to work from home. How this disruption affects productivity and the related gender equity is an important operations and societal question. We collect data from the largest open-access preprint repository for social science on 41,858 research preprints in 18 disciplines produced by 76,832 authors across 25 countries over a span of two years. We use a difference-in-differences approach leveraging the exogenous pandemic shock. Our results indicate that, in the 10 weeks after the lockdown in the United States, although the total research productivity increased by 35%, female academics' productivity dropped by 13.9% relative to that of male academics. We also show that several disciplines drive such gender inequality. Finally, we find that this intensified productivity gap is more pronounced for academics in top-ranked universities, and the effect exists in six other countries. Our work points out the fairness issue in productivity caused by the lockdown, a finding that universities will find helpful when evaluating faculty productivity. It also helps organizations realize the potential unintended consequences that can arise from telecommuting.
翻译:我们研究了COVID-19爆发对女性和男性学者社会科学研究生产率的过度封闭影响。封锁极大地扰乱了学术活动,要求人们在家里工作。这种中断如何影响生产力和相关性别平等,是一个重要的操作和社会问题。我们从社会科学最大的开放预印库收集了41 858份社会科学预印文件,其中涉及41 858份研究预印件,由25个国家的76 832名作者在两年内制作的18个学科。我们使用差异差异办法利用外来大流行病冲击。我们的结果显示,在美国被封锁后的10个星期里,尽管总体研究生产率提高了35%,但女性学者的生产率比男性学者的生产率下降了13.9%。我们还表明,若干学科导致了这种性别不平等。最后,我们发现,这种强化的生产力差距对于顶级大学的学者来说更为明显,在其他6个国家也存在这种影响。我们的工作指出,由于关闭而导致的生产率的公平问题。我们发现,大学在评估远程生产力时会发现,在评估学院生产率方面会产生意外后果时会有所帮助。