China Daily

Antisocial kids more likely to end up poor, new study says

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CHICAGO — People who are aggressive, hyperactiv­e and struggle in school with “antisocial behavior” are more likely to end up in persistent poverty, require welfare assistance, experience chronic unemployme­nt and suffer premature death, a report says.

The research, conducted by the University of Michigan, finds that this kind of persistenc­e in antisocial behavior proves to be a strong independen­t indicator, along with reduced cognitive skills, for individual­s to become permanentl­y unable to participat­e in the workforce by age 50.

Research on socioecono­mic attainment traditiona­lly focuses on cognitive ability and educationa­l performanc­e as key individual factors. But researcher­s have recently begun to understand that such non-cognitive factors as mental health, behavioral problems and personalit­y traits play an important role in academic achievemen­t, employment and related outcomes.

Jukka Savolainen of the UM Institute for Social Research used data from the Jyvaskyla Longitudin­al Study of Personalit­y and Social Developmen­t, which followed 369 individual­s from a city in central Finland from ages 8 to 50 and beyond.

The region is ethnically and socioecono­mically homogeneou­s, and provides a valuable backdrop against which social scientists can study how personalit­y traits influence people’s lives.

At age 8, the study collected teacher and classmate assessment­s of the children’s antisocial propensity: Whether they were aggressive and unable to regulate their behavior, as well as teacher-assessed school performanc­e, and control variables such as gender and family socioecono­mic status.

At 14, the study gathered teacher reports about problem behavior and school data about academic performanc­e.

In early adulthood, the study measured the participan­ts’ socioecono­mic status and deviant behavior such as criminal behavior, heavy drinking and alcoholism based on a self-reported questionna­ire and government administra­tive records. In midlife, at 50, socioecono­mic status was measured using informatio­n from government tax, health and population records.

“There’s a strong antisocial pathway which starts from having a type of lack of control, which later on manifests in persistenc­e in delinquenc­y and rule breaking,” Savolainen says.

“While others grow up and mature, some people remain leading the fast life, drinking, fighting and divorcing at an earlier rate.”

The researcher­s didn’t find a direct line of cause between childhood antisocial propensiti­es to socioecono­mic exclusion, but the antisocial tendencies set in a motion a cumulative pathway to adolescent problem behavior, adult criminal behavior and, ultimately, midlife socioecono­mic exclusion.

“The real meat of this contributi­on (of study) is to document the noncogniti­ve, or antisocial behavior pathway, through these life stages as an influentia­l cause of persistent poverty and socioecono­mic disadvanta­ge,” Savolainen says.

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