6533b831fe1ef96bd1299afd
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Secular rise in economically valuable personality traits
Matti SarvimäkiTuomas PekkarinenTuomas PekkarinenRoope UusitaloMarko TerviöMarkus Jokelasubject
kognitiiviset taidottulotMaleParentsPersonality Inventorymedia_common.quotation_subjecttulotasoCROSS-TEMPORAL METAANALYSISSocial Sciences050109 social psychologySTUDENTSBig Five personality traits and cultureDevelopmental psychologyPSYCHOLOGYCognitionGENERATION MEcognitive ability0502 economics and businessPersonalityHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050207 economicsPersonality testBig Five personality traitsta512media_commonMultidisciplinaryta511EarningsIQ GAINSSiblings05 social sciencespersoonallisuuden piirteetcohort effectsCognitionFlynn effectEDUCATIONBIRTH COHORT DIFFERENCESPERFORMANCEABILITYFlynn effectCohort effectIncomepersonality traitsINSTITUTIONS511 EconomicsPsychologyearningsPersonalitydescription
Although trends in many physical characteristics and cognitive capabilities of modern humans are well-documented, less is known about how personality traits have evolved over time. We analyze data from a standardized personality test administered to 79% of Finnish men born between 1962 and 1976 (n = 419,523) and find steady increases in personality traits that predict higher income in later life. The magnitudes of these trends are similar to the simultaneous increase in cognitive abilities, at 0.2-0.6 SD during the 15-y window. When anchored to earnings, the change in personality traits amounts to a 12% increase. Both personality and cognitive ability have consistent associations with family background, but the trends are similar across groups defined by parental income, parental education, number of siblings, and rural/ urban status. Nevertheless, much of the trends in test scores can be attributed to changes in the family background composition, namely 33% for personality and 64% for cognitive ability. These composition effects are mostly due to improvements in parents' education. We conclude that there is a "Flynn effect" for personality that mirrors the original Flynn effect for cognitive ability in magnitude and practical significance but is less driven by compositional changes in family background. Peer reviewed
| year | journal | country | edition | language | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017-01-01 |