The Intergenerational Transmission of Risk and Trust Attitude
Journal
Review of Economic Studies
ISSN
0034-6527
ISSN-Digital
1467-937X
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2012-04
Author(s)
Sunde, Uwe
Dohmen, Thomas
Falk, Armin
Huffman, David
Abstract
Recent theories endogenize the attitude endowments of individuals, assuming that they are shaped by the attitudes of parents and other role models. This paper tests empirically for the relevance of three aspects of the attitude transmission process highlighted in this theoretical literature: (1) transmission of attitudes from parents to children; (2) an impact of prevailing attitudes in the local environment on child attitudes; and (3) positive assortative mating of parents, which enhances the ability of a parent to pass on his or her attitudes to the child. We focus on two fundamentally important attitudes, willingness to take risks and willingness to trust others. We find empirical support for all three aspects, providing an empirical underpinning for the literature. An investigation of underlying mechanisms shows that socialization is important in the transmission process. Various parental characteristics and aspects of family structure are found to strengthen the socialization process, with implications for modeling the socialization production function and for policies focused on affecting children's non-cognitive skills. The paper also provides evidence that the transmission of risk and trust attitudes affects a wide variety of child outcomes, implying a potentially large total effect on children's economic situation.
Language
English
Keywords
Risk preferences
Trust
Intergenerational transmission
Cultural economics
Family economics
Assortative mating
Social interactions
HSG Classification
contribution to practical use / society
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publisher place
Oxford
Volume
79
Number
2
Start page
645
End page
677
Pages
33
Subject(s)
Division(s)
Eprints ID
71757