articleAmerican Economic ReviewJan 1, 2016Closed access

Intergenerational Income Mobility in the United States

Abstract

Social scientists and policy analysts have long expressed concern about the extent of intergenerational income mobility in the United States, but remarkably little empirical evidence is available. The few existing estimates of the intergenerational correlation in income have been biased downward by measurement error, unrepresentative samples, or both. New estimates based on intergenerational data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics imply that the intergenerational correlation in long-run income is at least 0.4, indicating dramatically less mobility than suggested by earlier research. Copyright 1992 by American Economic Association.

Citation impact

1,669
total citations
FWCI
287.47
Percentile
100%
References
35
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Panel Study of Income Dynamics
  • Economics
  • Social mobility
  • Economic mobility
  • Demographic economics
  • Positive correlation
  • Income distribution
  • Inequality
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • No poverty
No related works found for this paper.