Born with a silver spoon: Danish evidence on wealth inequality in childhood

Research output: Working paperResearch

Standard

Born with a silver spoon : Danish evidence on wealth inequality in childhood. / Boserup, Simon Halphen; Kopczuk, Wojciech; Kreiner, Claus Thustrup.

2016.

Research output: Working paperResearch

Harvard

Boserup, SH, Kopczuk, W & Kreiner, CT 2016 'Born with a silver spoon: Danish evidence on wealth inequality in childhood'. <https://www.econ.ku.dk/boserup/papers/KidsWealth_Aug2016.pdf>

APA

Boserup, S. H., Kopczuk, W., & Kreiner, C. T. (2016). Born with a silver spoon: Danish evidence on wealth inequality in childhood. National Bureau of Economic Research. Working Paper Series Vol. 2016 No. 22549 https://www.econ.ku.dk/boserup/papers/KidsWealth_Aug2016.pdf

Vancouver

Boserup SH, Kopczuk W, Kreiner CT. Born with a silver spoon: Danish evidence on wealth inequality in childhood. 2016 Aug.

Author

Boserup, Simon Halphen ; Kopczuk, Wojciech ; Kreiner, Claus Thustrup. / Born with a silver spoon : Danish evidence on wealth inequality in childhood. 2016. (National Bureau of Economic Research. Working Paper Series; No. 22549, Vol. 2016).

Bibtex

@techreport{074fe639b8ef4c03a71fe0b68079c95d,
title = "Born with a silver spoon: Danish evidence on wealth inequality in childhood",
abstract = "We study wealth inequality in childhood using Danish wealth records from three decades. While teenagers have some earnings, we estimate that transfers account for at least 50 percent of wealth at age 18, and much more so for the rich children. Inheritance from grandparents does not appear quantitatively important, but we do find evidence that children receive inter vivos transfers. While wealth holdings are small in childhood, they have strong predictive power for future wealth in adulthood. Asset holdings at age 18 are more informative than parental wealth in predicting wealth of children many years later when they are in their 40s. Hence, childhood wealth reveals significant heterogeneity in the intergenerational transmission of wealth, which is not simply captured by parental wealth alone. We investigate why this is the case and rule out that childhood wealth in itself can accumulate enough to explain later wealth inequality. Our evidence indicates that childhood wealth is a proxy for a broad set of circumstances related to intergenerational transmission and future wealth accumulation, including savings/investment behavior and additional transfers.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, D31, J62",
author = "Boserup, {Simon Halphen} and Wojciech Kopczuk and Kreiner, {Claus Thustrup}",
note = "JEL Classification: D31, J62",
year = "2016",
month = aug,
language = "English",
series = "National Bureau of Economic Research. Working Paper Series",
publisher = "National Bureau of Economic Research Inc",
number = "22549",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "National Bureau of Economic Research Inc",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Born with a silver spoon

T2 - Danish evidence on wealth inequality in childhood

AU - Boserup, Simon Halphen

AU - Kopczuk, Wojciech

AU - Kreiner, Claus Thustrup

N1 - JEL Classification: D31, J62

PY - 2016/8

Y1 - 2016/8

N2 - We study wealth inequality in childhood using Danish wealth records from three decades. While teenagers have some earnings, we estimate that transfers account for at least 50 percent of wealth at age 18, and much more so for the rich children. Inheritance from grandparents does not appear quantitatively important, but we do find evidence that children receive inter vivos transfers. While wealth holdings are small in childhood, they have strong predictive power for future wealth in adulthood. Asset holdings at age 18 are more informative than parental wealth in predicting wealth of children many years later when they are in their 40s. Hence, childhood wealth reveals significant heterogeneity in the intergenerational transmission of wealth, which is not simply captured by parental wealth alone. We investigate why this is the case and rule out that childhood wealth in itself can accumulate enough to explain later wealth inequality. Our evidence indicates that childhood wealth is a proxy for a broad set of circumstances related to intergenerational transmission and future wealth accumulation, including savings/investment behavior and additional transfers.

AB - We study wealth inequality in childhood using Danish wealth records from three decades. While teenagers have some earnings, we estimate that transfers account for at least 50 percent of wealth at age 18, and much more so for the rich children. Inheritance from grandparents does not appear quantitatively important, but we do find evidence that children receive inter vivos transfers. While wealth holdings are small in childhood, they have strong predictive power for future wealth in adulthood. Asset holdings at age 18 are more informative than parental wealth in predicting wealth of children many years later when they are in their 40s. Hence, childhood wealth reveals significant heterogeneity in the intergenerational transmission of wealth, which is not simply captured by parental wealth alone. We investigate why this is the case and rule out that childhood wealth in itself can accumulate enough to explain later wealth inequality. Our evidence indicates that childhood wealth is a proxy for a broad set of circumstances related to intergenerational transmission and future wealth accumulation, including savings/investment behavior and additional transfers.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - D31

KW - J62

M3 - Working paper

T3 - National Bureau of Economic Research. Working Paper Series

BT - Born with a silver spoon

ER -

ID: 164793735