Marian Vidal-Fernandez, University of Sydney and Ana Nuevo-Chiquero, University of Edinburgh
The title of this article might trigger self-satisfied smiles among first-borns, and some concerns among the rest of us.
Many studies show children born earlier in the family enjoy better wages and more education, but until now we didn’t really know why.
Our recently published findings are the first to suggest advantages of first born siblings start very early in life – around zero to three years old! We observe parents changing their behaviour as new children are born, and offering less cognitive stimulation to children of higher birth order.
The birth order puzzle
It now seems clear that for those born and raised in high-income countries such as the United States, the UK and Norway, earlier-born children enjoy higher wages and education as adults – known as the “birth order effect”. Comparing two siblings, the greater the difference in their birth order, the greater the relative benefit to the older child.
However, to date we’ve had no evidence that explains where such differences come from.
We know it’s not an effect of family size, because the effect remains when comparing siblings within the same family and families with the same number of children.
While it makes sense that parents earn more money and gain experience as they get older and have more children, they also need to divide their economic resources and attention among any children that arrive after the first born. We wondered where in childhood these differences began, and what the cause or causes might be.
The origins of the birth order effect
We investigated when birth order differences appear and how they evolve from birth to adolescence. The study involved a longitudinal analysis of around 5,000 American children.
Our findings suggest that birth order differences can start before the age of three. We see an effect of birth order on measures of the physical and social development of children. Such differences increase slightly with age, and show up in a wide array of test scores that measure verbal, reading, math and comprehension abilities.
Somewhat surprisingly, in both our study and in previous ones, there is no evidence that younger children are born disadvantaged: if anything, later-borns are actually on average heavier and healthier at birth. Thus, the birth order effect does not seem to be related to an obvious biological advantage at birth.
Quality of parental investment is key
We explored changes in parental behaviour as a potential contributor to the birth order effect. Our assessment tool was the Home Observation Measurement of the Environment, which provides a measure of the quality of the cognitive stimulation and emotional support provided by a child’s family.