Patience among children

Recent policy initiatives offer cash payments to children (and often their families) to induce better health and educational choices. These policies implicitly assume that children are especially impatient (i.e., have high discount rates); however, little is known about the nature of children's patience, how it varies across children, and whether children can even make rational intertemporal choices. This paper examines the inter-temporal choices of five to sixteen year old children in an artefactual field experiment. We examine their choices between varying levels of compensation received in two or four months in the future and in zero or two months in the future. We find that children's choices are consistent with hyperbolic discounting, boys are less patient than girls, older children are more patient and that mathematical achievement test scores, private schooling and parent's patience are not correlated with children's patience. We also find that although more than 25 percent of children do not make rational inter-temporal choices within a single two-period time frame, we cannot find variables that explain this behavior other than age and standardized mathematical achievement test scores.

[1]  Daniel L. Millimet,et al.  Bounding the Impact of Market Experience on Rationality: Evidence from a Field Experiment with Imperfect Compliance * , 2006 .

[2]  M. Coller,et al.  Eliciting Individual Discount Rates , 1999 .

[3]  K. Kirby,et al.  Impatience and grades: Delay-discount rates correlate negatively with college GPA , 2002 .

[4]  V. Smith,et al.  Research in Experimental Economics , 1979 .

[5]  William T. Harbaugh,et al.  Economic Experiments that You Can Perform at Home on Your Children , 1999 .

[6]  David I. Laibson,et al.  Golden Eggs and Hyperbolic Discounting , 1997 .

[7]  Petra E. Todd,et al.  Progressing Through Progresa: An Impact Assessment of a School Subsidy Experiment , 2001 .

[8]  Casey B. Mulligan,et al.  The Endogenous Determination of Time Preference , 1997 .

[9]  E. Maskin,et al.  Uncertainty and Hyperbolic Discounting , 2005 .

[10]  J. T. Warner,et al.  The Personal Discount Rate: Evidence from Military Downsizing Programs , 2001 .

[11]  David I. Laibson,et al.  Life-cycle consumption and hyperbolic discount functions , 1998 .

[12]  P. Samuelson A Note on Measurement of Utility , 1937 .

[13]  H. Gintis,et al.  The Determinants of Earnings: A Behavioral Approach , 2001 .

[14]  William T. Harbaugh,et al.  Garp for kids: On the development of rational choice behavior , 2001 .

[15]  J. List The nature and extent of discrimination in the marketplace: Evidence from the field , 2004 .

[16]  Colin Camerer,et al.  Neuroeconomics: How Neuroscience Can Inform Economics , 2005 .

[17]  Morten I. Lau,et al.  Elicitation using multiple price list formats , 2006 .

[18]  Alan C. Evans,et al.  Brain development during childhood and adolescence: a longitudinal MRI study , 1999, Nature Neuroscience.

[19]  C. Fershtman,et al.  Trust and discrimination in a segmented society: An experimental approach , 2001 .

[20]  Walter Mischel,et al.  Predicting adolescent cognitive and self-regulatory competencies from preschool delay of gratification: Identifying diagnostic conditions. , 1990 .

[21]  E. Bettinger,et al.  Using Experimental Economics to Measure the Effects of a Natural Educational Experiment on Altruism , 2005 .

[22]  H. Gintis,et al.  Incentive-Enhancing Preferences: Personality, Behavior, and Earnings , 2001 .

[23]  Morten I. Lau,et al.  Estimating Individual Discount Rates in Denmark: A Field Experiment , 2002 .

[24]  Glenn W. Harrison,et al.  Eliciting risk and time preferences using field experiments: Some methodological issues , 2006 .

[25]  Samuel M. McClure,et al.  Separate Neural Systems Value Immediate and Delayed Monetary Rewards , 2004, Science.

[26]  M. Paule,et al.  Developmental aspects of timing behavior in children. , 2004, Neurotoxicology and teratology.

[27]  William T. Harbaugh,et al.  Children's altruism in public good and dictator experiments , 2000 .

[28]  G. Loewenstein,et al.  Time Discounting and Time Preference: A Critical Review , 2002 .

[29]  W. Mischel,et al.  Delay of gratification in children. , 1989, Science.

[30]  Dean S. Karlan,et al.  Using Experimental Economics to Measure Social Capital and Predict Financial Decisions , 2005 .

[31]  T. Flynn Development of self‐concept, delay of gratification and self‐control and disadvantaged preschool children's achievement gain , 1985 .