Discrimination of toddlers: a nationwide field experiment

Behaviour, Organisations and Markets Seminar
Children hand playing with wooden colourful dinosaurs

We provide causal evidence on whether toddlers face discrimination, independent of parents' race. Identifying discrimination against toddlers is methodologically difficult because most signals available to gatekeepers, such as names, speech, or behavior, are tied to parental characteristics.

Speaker
Wladislaw Mill
Date
Tuesday 2 Jun 2026, 13:00 - 14:15
Type
Seminar
Room
4.16
Building
Langeveld Building
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Joint work with Felix Rusche

We exploit natural variation in children's skin tone within mixed-race parents, which is plausibly orthogonal to parental traits. We use this variation in a nationwide field experiment involving the near-universe of more than 25,000 German childcare facilities. Each facility receives a standardized email inquiry accompanied by an AI-generated family photograph in which parental appearance is held fixed while we gradually vary the toddler's racial features on a Black-white scale. 

We find a non-linear effect of race on response rates, information quality, and sentiment, with the Black toddlers showing the lowest response rate, independent of parental race. We further examine how discrimination varies with local level variables, such as right-wing vote shares, competition over childcare slots, and exposure to migrants.

Registration for bilateral, lunch or dinner

Lunch will be provided. If you would like to meet the guest speaker for a bilateral, join for lunch or dinner, then please register by filling in the registration form.

See also

Reskilling Decisions of Unemployed Jobseekers

Elisabeth Leduc (Erasmus School of Economics)
2 men in formal clothing walking towards a room to have a job interview

The Death and Life of Great British Cities

Alex Trew (University of Glasgow)
Narrow city street lined with old brick buildings and a hanging flag.

Policy Afternoon 'Tackling Place-Based Inequalities'

With presentations by Matthijs Korevaar, Sara Signorelli and Elisabeth Leduc.

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