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Parents often stress about their kids’ academic performance, worth ethic, and behavior toward others. Those things are clearly important. But according to the Dunedin study, none of them is the best predictor of whether a particular child will grow up to lead a satisfying, financially stable life. Neither is the wealth, education, or socioeconomic status of the parents.
I find this a bit hard to believe. I tried tracking down more info on the study itself, but the links on the Inc.com article just link to more Inc.com articles; and one science.org article that wasn't really a description of the research but an overview of the history of the entire research agenda.
I did manage to glean that the study was done on a cohort of 1,000 babies born in New Zealand 50 years ago. Thus, I'm not sure the results about financial success can extrapolate to other social and economic contexts.