Current:Home > ContactCan having attractive parents increase your chances of getting rich? -Keystone Capital Education
Can having attractive parents increase your chances of getting rich?
View
Date:2025-04-18 15:41:24
The offspring of physically attractive parents tend to earn more money over the course of their working lives than kids with regular-looking or unattractive parents, a new study finds.
In other words, good-looking parents are more likely to have wealthier children, researchers state in "The Economic Impact of Heritable Physical Traits: Hot Parents, Rich Kid?" from the National Bureau of Economic Research. More specifically, the children of parents identified as attractive earn $2,300 more per year than those with average-looking parents.
"The purpose was to ask the question, 'How much does my parents' beauty, or lack thereof, contribute to my beauty, and does that feed into how I do economically?'" labor economist Daniel S. Hamermesh, a co-author of the study, told CBS MoneyWatch.
Hamermesh is also the author of the book "Beauty Pays: Why Attractive People Are More Successful."
"Good-looking parents make more money — the effects of looks on money have been shown countless times," Hamermesh added "Their beauty affects their income, and they pass that income-earning ability down to their kids."
To be sure, and as social scientists themselves acknowledge, physical attractiveness doesn't determine financial destiny, nor guarantee higher pay or professional success in general. Beauty is famously in the eye of the beholder, while gendered and evolving beauty standards complicate the effort to identify possible links between how you look and what you earn. The study was also limited by its reliance mostly on mothers' appearance given a general lack of data on fathers' looks.
Yet ample research has, in fact, shown at least a correlation between a person's physical traits and, for example, the likelihood to get promoted at work. Relatedly, and as the new study notes, researchers have long documented a link between height and weight and earnings.
"Differences in beauty are just one cause of inequality among adults that arise from partly heritable physical traits," the NBER study states.
A parent's looks can increase a child's earnings both directly and indirectly, Hamermesh and co-author Anwen Zhang, a senior lecturer in economics at the University of Glasgow, write. First, and most simply, being born to attractive parents increases the odds of inheriting good looks, which can help on the professional front. Second, higher-income parents can pass on more wealth to their children.
The study also seeks to pinpoint precisely how much inequality the appearance factor can create. Over the course of a career, it can amount to over $100,000 more in earnings for kids of attractive parents. Again, this isn't an iron law, and is subject to many variables.
"But in general, if you take a pair of parents that are good-looking, their kid is more likely to be more good looking," Hamermesh said. "It's an issue of equality of opportunity."
Megan CerulloMegan Cerullo is a New York-based reporter for CBS MoneyWatch covering small business, workplace, health care, consumer spending and personal finance topics. She regularly appears on CBS News Streaming to discuss her reporting.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- First long COVID treatment clinical trials from NIH getting underway
- GOP presidential race for Iowa begins to take shape
- Elon Musk sues disinformation researchers, claiming they are driving away advertisers
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Bette Midler, David Hasselhoff, more stars remember Paul Reubens: 'We loved you right back'
- Multiple people taken to hospitals after commercial building fire in Phoenix suburb
- Georgia woman charged in plot to kill her ex-Auburn football player husband, reports say
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- France planning an evacuation of people seeking to leave Niger after the coup in its former colony
Ranking
- Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
- Environmental groups say they’ll sue to block Virginia from leaving greenhouse gas compact
- Bette Midler, David Hasselhoff, more stars remember Paul Reubens: 'We loved you right back'
- Vermont confirms 2nd death from flooding: a 67-year-old Appalachian Trail hiker
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Retired bishop in New York state gets married after bid to leave priesthood denied
- Driver pleads not guilty in hit-and-run that killed a 4-year-old Boston boy
- 'A long, long way to go,' before solving global waste crisis, 'Wasteland' author says
Recommendation
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
Ex-millionaire who had ties to corrupt politicians gets 5-plus years in prison for real estate fraud
Maine fisherman hope annual catch quota of valuable baby eel will be raised
Appeals court lets Kentucky enforce ban on transgender care for minors
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
What is the Tau fruit fly? Part of LA County under quarantine after invasive species found
Mississippi man gets 40 years for escaping shortly before end of 7-year prison term
Michigan prosecutors charge Trump allies in felonies involving voting machines, illegal ‘testing’