Literature DB >> 28529385

Shocking Behavior: Random Wealth in Antebellum Georgia and Human Capital Across Generations.

Hoyt Bleakley1, Joseph Ferrie2.   

Abstract

Does the lack of wealth constrain parents' investments in the human capital of their descendants? We conduct a nearly fifty-year followup of an episode in which such constraints would have been plausibly relaxed by a random allocation of substantial wealth to families. We track descendants of participants in Georgia's Cherokee Land Lottery of 1832, in which nearly every adult white male in Georgia took part. Winners received close to the median level of wealth - a large financial windfall orthogonal to participants' underlying characteristics that might have also affected their children's human capital. Although winners had slightly more children than non-winners, they did not send them to school more. Sons of winners have no better adult outcomes (wealth, income, literacy) than the sons of non-winners, and winners' grandchildren do not have higher literacy or school attendance than non-winners' grandchildren. This suggests only a limited role for family financial resources in the formation of human capital in the next generations in this environment and a potentially more important role for other factors that persist through family lines.

Entities:  

Year:  2016        PMID: 28529385      PMCID: PMC5436311          DOI: 10.1093/qje/qjw014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Q J Econ        ISSN: 0033-5533


  1 in total

1.  Human capital and the rise and fall of families.

Authors:  G S Becker; N Tomes
Journal:  J Labor Econ       Date:  1986-07
  1 in total
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Journal:  J Econ Hist       Date:  2018-04-03

5.  Intergenerational transmission of paternal trauma among US Civil War ex-POWs.

Authors:  Dora L Costa; Noelle Yetter; Heather DeSomer
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-10-15       Impact factor: 12.779

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