What happens when we randomly assign children to families?
What happens when we randomly assign children to families?
Rate this book:
About This Book
"I use a new data set of Korean-American adoptees who, as infants, were randomly assigned to families in the U.S. I examine the treatment effects from being assigned to a high income family, a high education family or a family with four or more children. I calculate the transmission of income, education and health characteristics from adoptive parents to adoptees. I then compare these coefficients of transmission to the analogous coefficients for biological children in the same families, and to children raised by their biological parents in other data sets. Having a college educated mother increases an adoptee's probability of graduating from college by 7 percentage points, but raises a biological child's probability of graduating from college by 26 percentage points. In contrast, transmission of drinking and smoking behavior from parents to children is as strong for adoptees as for non-adoptees. For height, obesity, and income, transmission coefficients are significantly higher for non-adoptees than for adoptees. In this sample, sibling gender composition does not appear to affect adoptee outcomes nor does the mix of adoptee siblings versus biological siblings"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Bruce Sacerdote
How do friendships form?
How do friendships form?
Peer effects with random assig
Peer effects with random assignment
Slavery and the intergeneratio
Slavery and the intergenerational transmission of human capital
The determinants of punishment
The determinants of punishment
The nature and nurture of econ
The nature and nurture of economic outcomes
Why is there more crime in cit
Why is there more crime in cities?