This study examines how parenting styles predict children’s lifetime outcomes. Using a Swedish dataset which combines rich survey information on parenting styles with administrative records tracking children over five decades, we find that authoritarian parenting is negatively associated with children’s long-term success, especially regarding their educational attainment. The results for other parenting styles are more mixed. Authoritarian parenting remains a robust predictor of adverse outcomes even when accounting for ability and family background. We identify children’s knowledge accumulation and parental educational expectations as key mechanisms explaining these results.
Working Paper No. 1551
How Parenting Styles Shape Children’s Lifetime Outcomes
Working Paper
Reference
Dohmen, Thomas, Bart Golsteyn, Hans Grönqvist, Edvin Hertegård and Gerard Pfann (2026). “How Parenting Styles Shape Children’s Lifetime Outcomes”. IFN Working Paper No. 1551. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).
Dohmen, Thomas, Bart Golsteyn, Hans Grönqvist, Edvin Hertegård and Gerard Pfann (2026). “How Parenting Styles Shape Children’s Lifetime Outcomes”. IFN Working Paper No. 1551. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).
Authors
Thomas Dohmen,
Bart Golsteyn,
Hans Grönqvist, Edvin Hertegård,
Gerard Pfann