Author: RuifeiGuo,JunsenZhang NingZhang
Abstract: Studies on heterogeneous effects of adversities usually explore one exogenous variation in adversity. We explore two exogenous variations to examine how birth endowment changes individual resilience to an adolescent adversity. While China's send-down campaign offers a social experiment that exposes people to an adversity in adolescence, we use twins' difference in birthweight as a natural experiment on birth endowment. The use of exogenous variations in both endowment and adversity enables us to clearly identify the interaction effect of endowment and adversity. We find that effects of send-down experience on income, education, and health differ by birthweight. For brothers with a 10% difference in birthweight, if the higher-endowed male was sent down, then he would earn approximately 12% more than his co-twin. For sisters with a 10 % difference in birthweight, if the higher-endowed female was sent down, she is 8% more likely to upgrade her education after the send-down movemen t, and 9.8 percentage points less likely to be overweight or have chronic diseases. Long-term consequences of anadolescent adversity differ substantially by birth endowment.
This article is expected to be published in April 2022 in Volume 196 of the Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, an A-category journal of the School of Economics and Management
Paper link: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S016726812200052X?dgcid=coauthor