This paper uses nationally-representative data from the PSID and CDS to estimate the causal effects of two parent socialization actions—talking to children about giving and role-modeling—on children’s decisions whether or not to give to charity. We develop an identification framework based on the intra-household allocation and cultural transmission literatures that shows how different assumptions about parental response to time-varying unobserved changes in children’s prosocial values can be combined with the child fixed effects estimate and the difference between siblings’ over-time-differences estimate to infer a bound on the causal effect of parental action to socialize their children. Under the identifying assumption we think is most re...
ArticleThe literature on pro-social behavior shows that older children are more generous than young...
Young children make sophisticated social and normative inferences based on proportional reasoning. W...
Adult influence on children’s altruistic behavior may differ between cultural communities. We used a...
Using data drawn from the U.S. Panel Study of Income Dynamics, we explore the relationship between t...
The Center on Philanthropy Panel Study (COPPS) has provided the first data on the giving of parents ...
This paper provides a summary of what is known from social science research about the effects parent...
Models of young adults’ prosocial behavior—charitable giving and volunteering—are estimated as funct...
This paper provides a summary of what is known from social science research about the effects parent...
Parents are always trying to influence what their child becomes. One way to study that is to examine...
The aim of the current study was to determine whether the level of generosity shown by 3- to 8-year-...
This report offers empirically based evidence to guide parents on their journeys to raise charitable...
There has been a resurgence of interest in prosocial behaviour in recent years, but many authors avo...
Model similarity and familiarity were investigated for adult and similar aged models demonstrating p...
This paper investigates the research question: How do religious youth learn to give? While it is lik...
Women Give 2013, New Research on Charitable Giving by Girls and Boys, offers empirically based evide...
ArticleThe literature on pro-social behavior shows that older children are more generous than young...
Young children make sophisticated social and normative inferences based on proportional reasoning. W...
Adult influence on children’s altruistic behavior may differ between cultural communities. We used a...
Using data drawn from the U.S. Panel Study of Income Dynamics, we explore the relationship between t...
The Center on Philanthropy Panel Study (COPPS) has provided the first data on the giving of parents ...
This paper provides a summary of what is known from social science research about the effects parent...
Models of young adults’ prosocial behavior—charitable giving and volunteering—are estimated as funct...
This paper provides a summary of what is known from social science research about the effects parent...
Parents are always trying to influence what their child becomes. One way to study that is to examine...
The aim of the current study was to determine whether the level of generosity shown by 3- to 8-year-...
This report offers empirically based evidence to guide parents on their journeys to raise charitable...
There has been a resurgence of interest in prosocial behaviour in recent years, but many authors avo...
Model similarity and familiarity were investigated for adult and similar aged models demonstrating p...
This paper investigates the research question: How do religious youth learn to give? While it is lik...
Women Give 2013, New Research on Charitable Giving by Girls and Boys, offers empirically based evide...
ArticleThe literature on pro-social behavior shows that older children are more generous than young...
Young children make sophisticated social and normative inferences based on proportional reasoning. W...
Adult influence on children’s altruistic behavior may differ between cultural communities. We used a...