In
Pew survey, women fare better on most leadership traits
Honest - Ethical - Safe
- Respectful
Women Fared Better
A
wide-ranging
survey by the Pew Research Center — dropped in a midterm year when a
record number of women have been nominated for seats in the U.S. House of
Representatives — has drawn attention for the stark numbers it showed.
The Washington Post’s Philip Bump
examined its look at the “density” of women in leadership roles, with
university presidents having the most women (a whopping 30 percent) and chief
executive jobs having the fewest (just 5 percent). The New York Times
looked at the differences between how the parties view the issue. NPR
analyzed the differences in how male and female Democrats, or male and
female Republicans, feel about the gender and leadership roles. (For instance,
nearly half of GOP women say discrimination keeps women out of office, triple
the 14 percent of GOP men who say the same.)
But the Pew survey also looks at another interesting disconnect. It examined the
leadership skills people believe women bring to the job — and the results are
both strikingly familiar and somewhat more favorable to women. Yet despite these
votes of confidence in their qualities, women increasingly doubt voters are
ready to elect them. Fifty-seven percent of women in the survey said that
unreadiness is a major reason women are underrepresented in leadership roles,
compared with 41 percent in 2014.
To be sure, many respondents to the survey (43 percent) said men and women have
basically similar leadership styles. And among the 57 percent who said men and
women have basically different styles, most said neither is better: 62 percent
expressed no preference for either style.
But do a deep dive into the leadership attributes queried in the Pew survey, and
women fared slightly better on almost all of them. Of the nine leadership
qualities listed for political leaders, men fared better than women on only one
(being willing to take risks); men and women were equally favored on working
well under pressure. And of the 12 traits listed for business leaders, women
fared better on all but three (risk-taking, being persuasive and making
profitable deals). (The Pew survey is not clear in its write-up on how the list
of traits was selected.)
Thirty-one percent said women were better at being honest and ethical — a
leadership trait 91 percent said was essential for political leadership jobs —
while 4 percent said men were better. Forty-two percent said women were better
at working out compromises, compared with 8 percent who favored men, for a
quality 78 percent said was essential in politics. (The remainder said they saw
no difference.)
Meanwhile, 89 percent said creating a safe and respectful workplace was an
essential quality for business leaders, and respondents favored women by far —
with 43 percent saying women were better at this trait and 5 percent saying men
were. Some differences were even bigger but were seen as less essential.
Fifty-nine percent said women were better at being compassionate and empathetic,
compared with 4 percent favoring men, but only 58 percent said it was a critical
trait. Other differences were smaller: 84 percent said providing good pay and
benefits was an essential quality; 28 percent said women were better at this
trait, while 5 percent favored men.
The results aren’t altogether surprising for those familiar with studies about
men’s and women’s leadership styles. It’s a complex, controversial area, filled
with conventional wisdom and stereotypes and made more complicated by the
expectations people have of how men and women “should” act as leaders. But there
is some academic
evidence that women tend to be more democratic, participative leaders —
compared with the tendency of men to adopt a more “command-and-control” style.
And other research has shown that female managers tend to motivate people more
with positive incentives and more often practice what’s known by researchers as
“transformational leadership” (acting as inspirational role models, fostering
positive relationships, developing team members' skills and motivating people to
go above and beyond).
The Pew survey is only a poll of public opinion, of course, not evidence of how
men and women actually do act in different leadership situations. But despite
the disconnect it shows between people slightly favoring women’s traits in
leadership — while holding lingering doubts that people are ready to vote for
them — it’s also encouraging to see majorities cite no difference between the
two.
On nearly every leadership trait in the Pew survey (being compassionate and
empathetic is a key holdout), most people see no difference between male and
female leaders. A majority of respondents see no difference in men’s and women’s
leadership styles. And again, while some see advantages on one side or the
other, most see no difference in who is better at different policy issues, such
as immigration or gun control. Electing more women may occur when more people
are willing to embrace the differences they see in men’s and women’s leadership
qualities, but it could also come when people manage to not see them at all.
This article originally appeared in
The Washington Post |
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