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Where is the Land of Opportunity? The Geography of Intergenerational Mobility in the United States

Item

Title
Where is the Land of Opportunity? The Geography of Intergenerational Mobility in the United States
Abstract/Description
We use administrative records on the incomes of more than 40 million children and their parents to describe three features of intergenerational mobility in the United States. First, we characterize the joint distribution of parent and child income at the national level. The conditional expectation of child income given parent income is linear in percentile ranks. On average, a 10 percentile increase in parent income is associated with a 3.4 percentile increase in a child's income. Second, intergenerational mobility varies substantially across areas within the U.S. For example, the probability that a child reaches the top quintile of the national income distribution starting from a family in the bottom quintile is 4.4% in Charlotte but 12.9% in San Jose. Third, we explore the factors correlated with upward mobility. High mobility areas have (1) less residential segregation, (2) less income inequality, (3) better primary schools, (4) greater social capital, and (5) greater family stability. While our descriptive analysis does not identify the causal mechanisms that determine upward mobility, the publicly available statistics on intergenerational mobility developed here can facilitate future research on such mechanisms.
Date
June 2014
Publisher
National Bureau of Economic Research
Resource type
en
Background/context type
en Conceptual
en Other
Other unique identifier
NBER Working Paper #19843
Citation
Chetty, R., Hendren, N., Kline, P., & Saez, E. (2014). Where is the Land of Opportunity? The Geography of Intergenerational Mobility in the United States (Working Paper No. 19843). National Bureau of Economic Research. https://doi.org/10.3386/w19843

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