Washington – A person’s date of birth can affect their climb up the corporate ladder, researchers say.
The study by Sauder School of Business researchers at theUniversity of British Columbia shows that only 6.13 percent of an S and P 500 CEO sample was born in June and only 5.87 percent of the sample was born in July.
By comparison, people born in March and April represented 12.53 percent and 10.67 percent of the sample of CEOs.
“Our findings indicate that summer babies underperform in the ranks of CEOs as a result of the ‘birth-date effect,’ a phenomenon resulting from the way children are grouped by age in school,” Maurice Levi, co-author of the study, said.
In the United States, cut-off dates for school admission fall between September and January. The researchers determined that those CEOs in the sample born between June and July were the youngest in their class during school, and those in March and April were the oldest.
This takes into account children born in months close to the cut offs who were held back or accelerated.
“Older children within the same grade tend to do better than the youngest, who are less intellectually developed,” Levi said.
“Early success is often rewarded with leadership roles and enriched learning opportunities, leading to future advantages that are magnified throughout life,” Levi said.
Levi and his co-authors, former Sauder PhD students Qianqian Du and Huasheng Gao, investigated the birth-date effect in a sample of 375 CEOs from S and P 500 companies between 1992 and 2009.
“Our study adds to the growing evidence that the way our education system groups students by age impacts their lifelong success,” Prof. Levi said.
“We could be excluding some of the business world’s best talent simply by enrolling them in school too early,” Levi added.
The study will be published in the journal Economics Letters.
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