The Impact of Childhood Social Skills and Self-Control Training on Economic and Noneconomic Outcomes: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment Using Administrative Data

Author:

Algan Yann1,Beasley Elizabeth2,Côté Sylvana3,Park Jungwee4,Tremblay Richard E.5,Vitaro Frank3

Affiliation:

1. HEC (email: )

2. CEPREMAP (email: )

3. University of Montréal (email: )

4. Statistics Canada (email: )

5. University College Dublin, University of Montréal (email: )

Abstract

A childhood intervention to improve the social skills and self-control of at-risk kindergarten boys in the 1980s had positive impacts over the life course: higher trust and self-control as adolescents; increased social group membership, education, and reduced criminality as young adults; and increased marriage and employment as adults. Using administrative data, we find this intervention increased average yearly employment income by about 20 percent and decreased average yearly social transfers by almost 40 percent. We estimate that $1 invested in this program around age 8 yields about $11 in benefits by age 39, with an internal rate of return of around 17 percent. (JEL I21, I26, I28, J13, J24, J31, Z13)

Publisher

American Economic Association

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

Reference89 articles.

1. Regulation and Distrust*

2. Algan, Yann, Elizabeth Beasley, Sylvana Côté, Frank Vitaro, Richard E. Tremblay, and Jungwee Park. 2022. "Replication Data for: The Impact of Childhood Social Skills and Self-Control Training on Economic and Noneconomic Outcomes: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment Using Administrative Data." American Economic Association [publisher], Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor]. https://doi.org/10.3886/E117141V1.

3. Inherited Trust and Growth

4. Algan, Yann, and Pierre Cahuc. 2014. "Trust, Growth, and Well-Being: New Evidence and Policy Implications." In Handbook of Economic Growth, Vol. 2, edited by Philippe Aghion and Steven Durlauf, 49-120. Amsterdam: Elsevier.

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