@GaryNMarks @tadesouaiaia @krichard1212 https://t.co/nLxghZrvCA 50 percent of the variance in lifetime income explained by additive genetics, none by shared environment, as per this Finnish adoption study
Fuente: -Hyytinen et al., 2019: https://t.co/wxk6h4Hxed
@ove_vapaalla @KariTikkinen @AnttiLatvala Rikokset: https://t.co/591t2tytjk Tulot Suomessa 0 % ympäristö (geenit 50 %), NOR 2 %, SWE 5 %, USA 9 %, AUS 13 %: https://t.co/3qpjEa5sfi
@CharlotteFang77 Fact check: Trvthquake. https://t.co/slpug9gbLh https://t.co/P0a2N7aMQw
@davidmacdougall Syntyperä ei selitä ansiotuloja. Geenit selittävät puolet ja sattuma (identtisten kaksosten "ei-jaettu ympäristö") loput. Vanhempien tulot siis näyttävät ennustavan lasten tuloja vain siltä osin kuin tietyt geenit ovat samoja (mm. älykkyys
RT @PaoloShirasi: Twin studies typically find that the heritability of income in Western countries is 40-45%. https://t.co/x2Xs54qtXN
RT @PaoloShirasi: Twin studies typically find that the heritability of income in Western countries is 40-45%. https://t.co/x2Xs54qtXN
RT @PaoloShirasi: Twin studies typically find that the heritability of income in Western countries is 40-45%. https://t.co/x2Xs54qtXN
RT @PaoloShirasi: Twin studies typically find that the heritability of income in Western countries is 40-45%. https://t.co/x2Xs54qtXN
RT @PaoloShirasi: Twin studies typically find that the heritability of income in Western countries is 40-45%. https://t.co/x2Xs54qtXN
RT @PaoloShirasi: Twin studies typically find that the heritability of income in Western countries is 40-45%. https://t.co/x2Xs54qtXN
RT @PaoloShirasi: Twin studies typically find that the heritability of income in Western countries is 40-45%. https://t.co/x2Xs54qtXN
@polishXcellence https://t.co/dxcgZHtpof The share of income caused by common (shared between siblings) environment is 10% at most. If your idea were true the gap would have vanished 1-2 generations after the economic ostracization.
@fsanchez1983 Yup, plenty of studies on it. Here's one: https://t.co/SpSRKvpkhi
% of the variation in income (United States) is explained by: - 41% genes 🧬 - 9% family home environment 🏡 (Hytinnen et al., 2019). https://t.co/UFox2RsQhU
% of the variation in income is explained by: - 41% genes 🧬 - 9% family home environment 🏡 (Hytinnen et al., 2019). https://t.co/UFox2RsQhU
@MarjoOllikainen @SirkiaHeli Tässä linkki julkaisuun. Vaikka kuinka tasoittaisit rahoja, et voi muuttee geenejä. https://t.co/WSsfHvb6DK
@RealDarthDrumpf @PlutoRacing @KeithWoodsYT @CensorThis420 @adrianweckler The academic literature is pretty clear on this. 1) Probably zero effect on adult intelligence: https://t.co/UdIl45YVWM 2) Probably a very small effect on a child's future income in
Journal of Economic Inequality: Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more than half of men’s lifetime labour earnings are linked to genetic factors. https://t.co/WSsfHvb6DK
Všem stejně, protože jste se o své bohatství nezasloužili. Jen jste měli štěstí.
@petr_gwuzd @N3CR0S Ano, vsechno chování je ovlivněno geneticky, včetně těch, které určují finanční situaci. Máme studie, které ukazují na genetický determinant úrovně vzdělání, inteligence, příjmů, SES statusu, třídní příslušnosti... https://t.co/hYsPp
@Factoholik @Salty_The_Hag @tradcatboy @Outsideness >He didn't read the "eeewwuu poor peepol" infographics https://t.co/lFNqAI5vog https://t.co/slpug9gJAP https://t.co/5ei3DmKmfx
@Milio200 @SelfFakeMan1 @leummmaneholly @lucasacul69 @PaulK061104 @DamienRieu @TiboInShape La capacité à se faire de l'argent est en effet causé par des facteurs génétiques comme l'intelligence, et différents traits de personnalité utiles dans le monde du
@galtonboards It seems that classical twin studies on Western populations find a heritability of around 40-50% for lifetime income. https://t.co/nfL1V0y05M
RT @Race__Realist: Nice heritability fallacy. Daily reminder that when IQ is equated and social class is not, social class is deterministi…
RT @Race__Realist: Nice heritability fallacy. Daily reminder that when IQ is equated and social class is not, social class is deterministi…
RT @Race__Realist: Nice heritability fallacy. Daily reminder that when IQ is equated and social class is not, social class is deterministi…
RT @Race__Realist: Nice heritability fallacy. Daily reminder that when IQ is equated and social class is not, social class is deterministi…
RT @Race__Realist: Nice heritability fallacy. Daily reminder that when IQ is equated and social class is not, social class is deterministi…
RT @Race__Realist: Nice heritability fallacy. Daily reminder that when IQ is equated and social class is not, social class is deterministi…
Nice heritability fallacy. Daily reminder that when IQ is equated and social class is not, social class is deterministic of professional success and the IQ-income relationship is due to family background and social class is, not IQ. https://t.co/RjDc5WnS5
RT @sebjenseb: The heritability of educational attainment is about ~50%, and the heritability of income is about ~40% in women, and ~50% in…
RT @sebjenseb: The heritability of educational attainment is about ~50%, and the heritability of income is about ~40% in women, and ~50% in…
The heritability of educational attainment is about ~50%, and the heritability of income is about ~40% in women, and ~50% in men. https://t.co/2VFK0uHmgI https://t.co/slpug9gJAP
@AlexGiannelis @cremieuxrecueil But shared environmental influences on lifetime earnings are much lower than for EA (see e.g. https://t.co/glViuKBz1T ). This striking discrepancy was noted by Freese & Jao 2017 here: https://t.co/dsJXIEvhTl. Jeremy Free
Compare that income heritability to previous results: https://t.co/AAWwpLue3v Is China unique? Is this sample bad? Has China not gotten over the stage of development where status has a lot of randomness?
RT @cremieuxrecueil: Earnings/income are/is consistently heritable. https://t.co/AAWwpLue3v
Earnings/income are/is consistently heritable. https://t.co/AAWwpLue3v
@captgouda24 @besttrousers @ShakedDown Hytinnen et al. had a miniature review in their study of the heritability of lifetime earnings: https://t.co/juu29TDDZL In their data, an AE model fit better than either the ACE or ADE models and they found A's of 0.
Aspects of social class are fairly heritable. https://t.co/hw2miESbMG
RT @cremieuxrecueil: Hootegem, Rogne & Lyngstad's new study on the heritability of social class is well-aligned with the rest of the litera…
RT @BostonTea84: Źródła: 1) https://t.co/UkvjWADfRp 2) https://t.co/qs4sJp4YDm (preprint) 3) https://t.co/yFpjFYjQuT
Źródła: 1) https://t.co/UkvjWADfRp 2) https://t.co/qs4sJp4YDm (preprint) 3) https://t.co/yFpjFYjQuT
Źródła: 1) https://t.co/UkvjWADfRp 2) https://t.co/qs4sJp4YDm (preprint) 3) https://t.co/yFpjFYjQuT
RT @cremieuxrecueil: Hootegem, Rogne & Lyngstad's new study on the heritability of social class is well-aligned with the rest of the litera…
RT @cremieuxrecueil: Hootegem, Rogne & Lyngstad's new study on the heritability of social class is well-aligned with the rest of the litera…
RT @cremieuxrecueil: Hootegem, Rogne & Lyngstad's new study on the heritability of social class is well-aligned with the rest of the litera…
Hootegem, Rogne & Lyngstad's new study on the heritability of social class is well-aligned with the rest of the literature. Here's them and Hytinnen et al. (2019) TL;DR: Yes, genetics, maybe some family, then randomness. https://t.co/ZKFyV6klD2 http
RT @ElonBachman: Measurement error and prenatal insults are the rest https://t.co/dSE0Vf789y
RT @pitiklinov: "La heredabilidad de los ingresos en los países occidentales suele ser del 40-45%."
RT @pitiklinov: "La heredabilidad de los ingresos en los países occidentales suele ser del 40-45%."
RT @pitiklinov: "La heredabilidad de los ingresos en los países occidentales suele ser del 40-45%."
RT @ElonBachman: Measurement error and prenatal insults are the rest https://t.co/dSE0Vf789y
RT @pitiklinov: "La heredabilidad de los ingresos en los países occidentales suele ser del 40-45%."
RT @pitiklinov: "La heredabilidad de los ingresos en los países occidentales suele ser del 40-45%."
RT @pitiklinov: "La heredabilidad de los ingresos en los países occidentales suele ser del 40-45%."
RT @pitiklinov: "La heredabilidad de los ingresos en los países occidentales suele ser del 40-45%."
"La heredabilidad de los ingresos en los países occidentales suele ser del 40-45%."
Measurement error and prenatal insults are the rest https://t.co/dSE0Vf789y
@gabriel_mathy @rfitz77 I mean, just look at the twin studies I say: https://t.co/5JSDMnEtTc
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
As a Finn, I'm not surprised
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
RT @PaoloShirasi: "Using twenty years of earnings data on Finnish twins, we find that about 40% of the variance of women’s and little more…
@JayMan471 ... We show that in the relatively equitable economic and institutional environment of Finland, the share of variance of lifetime earnings explained by education is clearly less than a tenth (in our data). ... https://t.co/iz8CtHKbUJ
RT @MrGeorgeFrancis: Conservatives often like to say that anyone can make it, if only they try hard enough... But twin studies suggest inc…
RT @MrGeorgeFrancis: Conservatives often like to say that anyone can make it, if only they try hard enough... But twin studies suggest inc…
RT @MrGeorgeFrancis: Conservatives often like to say that anyone can make it, if only they try hard enough... But twin studies suggest inc…
RT @MrGeorgeFrancis: Conservatives often like to say that anyone can make it, if only they try hard enough... But twin studies suggest inc…
RT @MrGeorgeFrancis: Conservatives often like to say that anyone can make it, if only they try hard enough... But twin studies suggest inc…
RT @MrGeorgeFrancis: Conservatives often like to say that anyone can make it, if only they try hard enough... But twin studies suggest inc…
@reconfigurthing Furthermore, decades of research has generally indicated that the contribution of the so-called shared environment (which are factors we can control) negligibly contributes to differences in income. Here's one example: https://t.co/oo6FV1I
@tadesouaiaia @ImmuneHack I would like to see the link to this study- the figure for 'household income' looks very strange to me given heritability estimates for lifetime income coming from other studies. https://t.co/uQOM4IZiXj
RT @Bioliberalism: School funding in the US is already mildly progressive, but parental SES has negligible effects on lifetime income in an…
@LouisatheLast @mavi4mayor @TPPF Define 'easy'? Relative variation in income is primarily explained by genetic factors, not parental SES (though the former obviously correlates with the latter.) https://t.co/uQOM4IZiXj
RT @Bioliberalism: School funding in the US is already mildly progressive, but parental SES has negligible effects on lifetime income in an…
@neozero497 @AlexNowrasteh @Noahpinion Oh, I'm well aware of this. I opened our conversation with that very observation. But whether your parents are rich or not will have a direct effect on whether you enjoy skiing holidays growing up or get into Harvar
RT @Bioliberalism: School funding in the US is already mildly progressive, but parental SES has negligible effects on lifetime income in an…
RT @Bioliberalism: School funding in the US is already mildly progressive, but parental SES has negligible effects on lifetime income in an…
School funding in the US is already mildly progressive, but parental SES has negligible effects on lifetime income in any case. Congratulations: we already live in the opportunity utopia. This is as good as it gets. https://t.co/0b0fCSCIjC https://t.co
@neozero497 @AlexNowrasteh @Noahpinion There is, in practice, no way to equalise opportunities without either equalising outcomes or separating parents from children. The good news is the inequalities resulting from parental SES appear to be negligible, a
@tnzn00 Non, le modèle ADE est utilisé lorsque l'environnement partagé est négatif. https://t.co/TMT4OmpGIP
@ThiefPenitent @Theo_TJ_Jordan I hate to be the cracked record here, but the bulk of evidence from studies that control for genetic factors is that SES has minimal impact on lifetime income. https://t.co/uQOM4IZiXj
@_miwil_ @Theo_TJ_Jordan The effects of parental SES on lifetime income are negligible within the developed world once genetic factors are controlled for. https://t.co/uQOM4IZiXj
@Scientific_Bird I've seen starker results than this, though the Korean adoptees are interesting. Hadn't seen that before. https://t.co/uQOM4IZiXj
@cercopithekevin @primalpoly @AryaVolkan @DanLarremore @aaronclauset @alliecmorgan @laberge_nick It's not as far-fetched as you might think, given the diverse array of life outcomes that show negligible influence from family background in twin/adoption stu
@willigula @primalpoly @aaronclauset @alliecmorgan @laberge_nick @DanLarremore Twin & adoption studies indicate that lifetime income is 50% genetically influenced, and the other half is random. https://t.co/uQOM4IZiXj
@michaelgarfield @primalpoly @DanLarremore @aaronclauset @alliecmorgan @laberge_nick @JacksonmMatt The heritability of lifetime income in several studies is roughly 50%, with no detectable effect from family background. Social networking is, in any case,