Birth‐order effects on risk taking are limited to the family environment

Author:

Lejarraga Tomás12ORCID,Schnitzlein Daniel D.34,Dahmann Sarah C.456,Hertwig Ralph2

Affiliation:

1. Departament d'Economia de l'Empresa Universitat de les Illes Balears Palma Spain

2. Center for Adaptive Rationality Max Planck Institute for Human Development Berlin Germany

3. Institute of Labor Economics Leibniz University Hannover Hannover Germany

4. Institute of Labor Economics (IZA) Bonn Germany

5. Melbourne Institute: Applied Economic & Social Research The University of Melbourne Parkville Victoria Australia

6. ARC Centre of Excellence for Children and Families over the Life Course The University of Queensland St Lucia Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractWhy is the empirical evidence for birth‐order effects on human psychology so inconsistent? In contrast to the influential view that competitive dynamics among siblings permanently shape a person's personality, we find evidence that these effects are limited to the family environment. We tested this context‐specific learning hypothesis in the domain of risk taking, using two large survey datasets from Germany (SOEP, n = 19,994) and the United States (NLSCYA, n = 29,627) to examine birth‐order effects on risk‐taking propensity across a wide age range. Specification‐curve analyses of a sample of 49,621 observations showed that birth‐order effects are prevalent in children aged 10–13 years, but that they decline with age and disappear by middle adulthood. The methodological approach shows the effect is robust. We thus replicate and extend previous work in which we showed no birth‐order effects on adult risk taking. We conclude that family dynamics cause birth‐order effects on risk taking but that these effects fade as siblings transition out of the home.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Neuroscience

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