Template-Type: ReDIF-Paper 1.0 Author-Name: Olivier Armantier Author-X-Name-First: Olivier Author-X-Name-Last: Armantier Author-Name: Sebastian Doerr Author-X-Name-First: Sebastian Author-X-Name-Last: Doerr Author-Name: Jon Frost Author-X-Name-First: Jon Author-X-Name-Last: Frost Author-Name: Andreas Fuster Author-X-Name-First: Andreas Author-X-Name-Last: Fuster Author-Name: Kelly Shue Author-X-Name-First: Kelly Author-X-Name-Last: Shue Title: Nothing to hide? Gender and age differences in the willingness to share data Abstract: Many digital applications in finance and elsewhere rely on the willingness of users to voluntarily share personal data. Yet some users may be less comfortable sharing data than others, potentially limiting the representativeness of resulting datasets. To document differences in the willingness to share data, we draw on questions to a representative sample of U.S. households added to the New York Fed's Survey of Consumer Expectations. We find that women are less willing than men, and older individuals less willing than the young, to share their financial transaction data in exchange for better offers on financial services. These differences can only partly be explained by variation in related attitudes and concerns. Through a randomized priming experiment using information about the California Consumer Privacy Act, we demonstrate that privacy regulation can increase individuals' willingness to share data, though this effect does not vary significantly by gender or age. Creation-Date: 2024-05 File-URL: https://www.bis.org/publ/work1187.pdf File-Format: Application/pdf File-Function: Full PDF document File-URL: https://www.bis.org/publ/work1187.htm File-Format: text/html Number: 1187 Keywords: data, privacy, CCPA, fintech, big tech, survey of consumer expectations Classification-JEL: C8, D8 Handle: RePEc:bis:biswps:1187