Authors
Anders Björklund, Lena Lindahl, Matthew J Lindquist
Publication date
2010/11/8
Journal
The BE Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy
Volume
10
Issue
1
Publisher
De Gruyter
Description
Sibling correlations are broader measures of the impact of family and community influences on individual outcomes than intergenerational correlations. Estimates of such correlations in income show that more than half of the family and community influences that siblings share are uncorrelated with parental income. We employ a data set with rich family information to explore what factors in addition to traditional measures of parents socio-economic status can explain sibling similarity in long-run income. Measures of family structure and social problems account for very little of sibling similarities beyond that already accounted for by income, education and occupation. However, when we add indicators of parental involvement in schoolwork, parenting practices and maternal attitudes, the explanatory power of our variables increases from about one-quarter (using only traditional measures of parents socio-economic …
Total citations
2010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320241713897711898712119
Scholar articles