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Helicopter Parents - 11/12/14

One of the terms that has become increasingly popular in our contemporary lexicon is helicopter parent.  These parents loom over their children like a news-chopper hangs over traffic, but instead of reporting outcomes, these parents are trying to shape them.  Like many social phenomenon, the emergence of helicopter parents is firmly rooted in economics.

This is the conclusion of a pair of European economists who set out to study parenting styles.  The economists, Fabrizio Zilibotti and Matthias Doepke, both themselves fathers, saaught to understand how economic conditions impact parenting.  What they discovered is the following – the lower is wealth and income inequality, the less helicopter parenting there tends to be.  When economic outcomes are likely to be grouped toward the middle and away from extremes, parents tend to relax, allowing for instance their children to have a free hand in determining their future occupations. 

But when economic outcomes become increasingly unequal, which is the case today in American and in much of the advanced world, parents become more engaged and autocratic, fearing that their offspring will be vulnerable to very bad economic outcomes such as chronic unemployment.

Anirban Basu, Chariman Chief Executive Officer of Sage Policy Group (SPG), is one of the Mid-Atlantic region's leading economic consultants. Prior to founding SPG he was Chairman and CEO of Optimal Solutions Group, a company he co-founded and which continues to operate. Anirban has also served as Director of Applied Economics and Senior Economist for RESI, where he used his extensive knowledge of the Mid-Atlantic region to support numerous clients in their strategic decision-making processes. Clients have included the Maryland Department of Transportation, St. Paul Companies, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra Players Committee and the Martin O'Malley mayoral campaign.