Are Tall People Less Risk Averse than Others?

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Olaf Hübler

In: Schmollers Jahrbuch 133 (2013), 1, 23-42

Abstract

This paper examines the question of whether risk aversion of prime-age workers is negatively correlated with human height to a statistically significant degree. A variety of estimation methods, tests and specifications yield robust results that permit one to answer this question in the affirmative. Hausman-Taylor panel estimates, however, reveal that height effects disappear if personality traits and skills, parents’ behaviour, and interactions between environment and individual abilities appear simultaneously. Height is a good proxy for these influences if they are not observable. Not only one factor but a combination of several traits and interaction effects can describe the time-invariant individual effect in a panel model of risk attitude.

Themen: Persönlichkeit



Keywords: height, risk preference
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3790/schm.133.1.23

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