Journal Article

Surveillance and Self-Control

Published: 18 Dec 2023

Abstract

This paper studies important determinants of adult self-control using population-representative data and exploiting Germany’s division as quasi-experimental variation. We find that former East Germans have substantially more self-control than West Germans and provide evidence for government surveillance as a possible underlying mechanism. We thereby demonstrate that institutional factors can shape people’s self-control. Moreover, we find that self-control increases linearly with age. In contrast to previous findings for children, there is no gender gap in adult self-control and family background does not predict self-control.

Authors

Deborah Cobb-Clark

Centre Member

Hannah Schildberg-Hörisch
Sarah Dahmann

Citation

Cobb-Clark, D. A., Dahmann, S. C., Kamhöfer, D. A., & Schildberg-Hörisch, H. (2023). Surveillance and Self-Control. The Economic Journal. Oxford University Press (OUP). https://doi.org/10.1093/ej/uead111