Birth Weight in the Long Run

Working Paper: NBER ID: w21354

Authors: Prashant Bharadwaj; Petter Lundborg; Danolof Rooth

Abstract: We study the effect of birth weight on long-run outcomes, including permanent income, income across various stages of the lifecycle, education, social benefits take-up, and adult mortality. For this purpose, we have linked a unique dataset on nearly all Swedish twins born between 1926- 1958, containing information on birth weight, to administrative records spanning nearly entire life time lab or market histories. We find that birth weight positively affects permanent income and income across large parts of the life cycle, although there is some evidence of a fade out after age 50. Our results indicate that lower birth weight children are more likely to avail of social insurance programs such as unemployment and sickness insurance and that birth weight matters for adult mortality. We supplement our main analysis with more recent data, which enables us to study how the impact of birth weight on income and education of young adults has changed across cohorts born almost 50 years apart.

Keywords: birth weight; long-run outcomes; permanent income; social benefits; adult mortality

JEL Codes: I1


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
birth weight (J13)permanent income (D31)
lower birth weight (J13)increased take-up of social assistance programs (H53)
lower birth weight (J13)poorer economic outcomes (F63)
birth weight (J13)adult mortality risk (J17)

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