Professor Klaus F. Zimmermann (UNU-MERIT, Maastricht University and GLO) will participate in the events around the “UNU-MERIT: 15 Year Celebration” next week. He contributes to the May Event Series: Research Seminars on May 16, 2022 by reporting about his work on “Economic Preferences”. In particular, he will speak about:
- Shyamal Chowdhury, Matthias Sutter & Klaus F. Zimmermann (2022), “Economic Preferences across Generations and Family Clusters: A Large-scale Experiment in a Developing Country”. Journal of Political Economy, September 2022 (vol. 130, no. 9). ManuscriptPLUSonlineAppendix. (More details see below).
- Holger Bonin, Amelie Constant, Kostas Tatsiramos & Klaus F. Zimmermann, Ethnic Persistence, Assimilation and Risk Proclivity. IZA Journal of Migration, 1:5 (2012).
- Holger Bonin, Amelie Constant, Kostas Tatsiramos & Klaus F. Zimmermann, Native-Migrant Differences in Risk Attitudes. Applied Economics Letters, 16 (2009), 1581-1586. Journal website.
Shyamal Chowdhury, Matthias Sutter & Klaus F. Zimmermann (2022)
Economic Preferences across Generations and Family Clusters: A Large-scale Experiment in a Developing Country
Forthcoming: Journal of Political Economy, September 2022 (vol. 130, no. 9)
Using data from large-scale experiments with entire families for Bangladesh, the research finds that both mothers’ and fathers’ risk, time and social preferences are significantly positively correlated with their children’s economic preferences. Results differ from evidence for rich countries.
Abstract: Our large-scale experiment with 542 families from rural Bangladesh finds substantial intergenerational persistence of economic preferences. Both mothers’ and fathers’ risk, time and social preferences are significantly (and largely to the same degree) positively correlated with their children’s economic preferences, even when controlling for personality traits and socio-economic background. We discuss possible transmission channels and are the first to classify all families into one of two clusters, with either relatively patient, risk-tolerant and pro-social members or relatively impatient, risk averse and spiteful members. Classifications correlate with socio-economic background variables. We find that our results differ from evidence for rich countries.
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