In this paper, we use a sample of almost 30,000 Swedish mono- and dizygotic twins to study the heritability of financial risk-taking. Following a major pension reform in the year 2000, virtually all Swedish adults had to simultaneously make a financial decision affecting post-retirement wealth. We take this event as a field experiment to infer risk preferences. We use standard techniques from behavior genetics to partition variation in risk-taking into environmental and genetic components. Our findings suggest that genetic variation is an important source of individual heterogeneity in financial risk-taking.
Working Paper No. 765
Is Financial Risk-taking Behavior Genetically Transmitted?
Working Paper
Reference
Cesarini, David, Magnus Johannesson, Paul Lichtenstein, Örjan Sandewall and Björn Wallace (2008). “Is Financial Risk-taking Behavior Genetically Transmitted?”. IFN Working Paper No. 765. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).
Cesarini, David, Magnus Johannesson, Paul Lichtenstein, Örjan Sandewall and Björn Wallace (2008). “Is Financial Risk-taking Behavior Genetically Transmitted?”. IFN Working Paper No. 765. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).
Authors
David Cesarini, Magnus Johannesson,
Paul Lichtenstein,
Örjan Sandewall,
Björn Wallace