Quantitative evidence on family paternalism is scant. We provide a novel measure to study if and how parents interfere in children's intertemporal decision-making.

Quantitative evidence on the extent of paternalism within families is scant. We provide a novel measure to study whether and how parents interfere paternalistically in their children's intertemporal decision-making. In an experiment with over 2,000 members from 610 families in Bangladesh, we find that more than half of all parents are willing to pay money to override their children's choices in order to mitigate the (correctly anticipated) level of children's present bias. The extent of parental paternalism is strongly related to parenting styles and we discuss how it interacts with the intergenerational transmission of patience.

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Miller Theatre, Old Canberra House, 132 Lennox Crossing, Acton 2602 ACT and online Zoom

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