FRIDAY, Dec. 3 (HealthDay News) -- While good-looking men find it easier to 
land a job interview, attractive women may be at a disadvantage, a new study
from Israel suggests.

Resumes that included photos of handsome men were twice as likely to generate 
requests for an interview, the study found. But resumes from women that included
photos were up to 30 percent less likely to get a response, whether or not the 
women were attractive. 

That good-looking women were passed over for interviews "was surprising," said 
study leader Bradley Ruffle, an economics researcher and lecturer at Ben-Gurion
University of the Negev. The finding contradicts a considerable body of 
research that shows that good-looking people are typically viewed as smarter, 
kinder
and more talented than those who are less attractive, he said. 

But Daniel S. Hamermesh, professor of economics at the University of Texas at 
Austin, "wasn't totally surprised," noting that other studies, including one
of his own, have found beauty a liability in the workplace. "I call this the 
'Bimbo Effect,'" said Hamermesh, considered an authority on the association
between beauty and the labor market. 

The current study appears online on the Social Science Research Network. 

In Israel, job hunters have the option of including a headshot with their 
resumes, whereas that is customary in many European countries but taboo in the
United States, Ruffle said. That made Israel the ideal testing ground for his 
research, he said.

To determine whether a job candidate's appearance affects the likelihood of 
landing an interview, Ruffle and a colleague mailed 5,312 virtually identical
resumes, in pairs, in response to 2,656 advertised job openings in 10 different 
fields. One resume included a photo of an attractive man or woman or a
plain man or woman; the other had no photo. Almost 400 employers (14.5 percent) 
responded. 

The resumes of good-looking men received a 20 percent response rate, compared 
to a 14 percent response for men with no photo and 9 percent for resumes from
plain-looking men, the study found. However, among women, resumes without 
photos got the highest response -- 22 percent higher than those from plain women
and 30 percent higher than those from attractive women. 

The apparent bias against attractive women depended on the type of employer 
that reviewed the resumes, said Ruffle. Employment agencies called pretty women
as often as plain ones, and only slightly less than women who didn't include a 
photo. But when the resumes were screened directly by the company at which
the candidate might work, those from attractive women received half the 
response of those from either plain women or women who didn't include photos. 

Hypothesizing that human resource departments are staffed mostly by women who 
feel jealous of attractive women in the workplace, the researchers called
each company to speak to the person who had reviewed the resumes. In this 
post-study survey, they found that 24 out of 25 were women.

The researchers also learned that the resume-screeners tended to be young and 
single, "qualities that are more likely to be associated with jealousy," said
Ruffle. 

Hamermesh wasn't convinced of the hypothesis, noting that the women trying to 
fill the open position were unlikely to work in the same division as the 
applicant,
attractive or not. "The researchers were not able to really test this. It was 
just an interesting hypothesis," he said. 

It's true that in most previous studies of labor-market outcomes, attractive 
women have come out on top, he said. "But other studies have found evidence
of the Bimbo Effect," he said.

In a 1998 study, Hamermesh and co-author Jeff Biddle found that good looks 
enhanced the likelihood that a male attorney would make partner early, but 
reduced
that likelihood for the most attractive women. 

While attractive women received fewer callbacks, those who make it to the 
interview stage still might land the job, the study said. The resume-screener
might not be the interviewer, and even if they are one and the same, the 
"pretty woman" bias might fade during a face-to-face interview. 

Still, "women are better off not including a photo with their resumes," said 
Ruffle. 

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