Cognitive skills, non-cognitive skills, and family background
Abstract
"This paper estimates sibling correlations in cognitive and non-cognitive skills to evaluate the importance of family background for skill formation. Based on a large representative German dataset including IQ test scores and measures of non-cognitive skills, a restricted maximum likelihood model indicates a strong relationship between family background and skill formation. Sibling correlations in non-cognitive skills range from 0.22 to 0.46; therefore, at least one-fifth of the variance in these skills results from shared sibling-related factors. Sibling correlations in cognitive skills are higher than 0.50; therefore, more than half of the inequality in cognition can be explained by shared family background. Comparing these findings with those in the intergenerational skill transmission literature suggests that intergenerational correlations capture only part of the influence of family on children's cognitive and non-cognitive skills, as confirmed by decomposition analyses and in line with previous findings on educational and income mobility." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
Cite article
Anger, S. & Schnitzlein, D. (2016): Cognitive skills, non-cognitive skills, and family background. Evidence from sibling correlations. (BERG working paper series 110), Bamberg, 44 p.
Further information
- later released (possibly different) in: Journal of Population Economics, online first (2016), 30 S.Opens in a new window
- Also released as: SOEPpapers on multidisciplinary panel data research at DIW Berlin , 834Opens in a new window
- Also released as: IAB-Discussion Paper , 30/2016Opens in a new window
- Also released as: IZA discussion paper , 9918Opens in a new window