Author(s)
Dorothea Blomeyer, Katja Coneus, Manfred Laucht, Friedhelm Pfeiffer

This paper investigates the role of early life adversity and home resources in terms of competence formation and school achievement based on data from an epidemiological cohort study following 364 children from birth to adolescence. Results indicate that organic and psychosocial risks present in early life as well as the socio-emotional home environment are significant predictors for the formation of competencies. Competencies acquired at preschool age predict achievement at school age. A counterfactual analysis is performed to assess trade-offs in the timing of interventions in the early life cycle.

JEL Codes
D87: Neuroeconomics
I12: Health Production
Keywords
initial risk matrix
socio-emotional and economic home resources
intelligence
persistence
peer relationship
school achievement