Big Money: On women in economics
It’s odd to hear from a female economist.
In Australia, Melbourne University economist Judith Sloan stands alone among female economists with a large public profile.
It’s not that female economists don’t exist. But they are few. And as most economists work in obscurity on topics worthy of little media attention, the odds of them breaking through are slim.
The funnel starts small too. When I studied economics at university, my first-year classes, held jointly with the accounting, commerce and finance majors, were full of women. But by second year, when classes focused just on economics, I became a small minority. By final year, it was not uncommon for me to be the only woman in my tutorials.
Big Money: On women in economics