Race and Economic Opportunity in the United States: an Intergenerational Perspective*
National Bureau of Economic Research · Harvard University · +1 more institution
Abstract
Abstract We study the sources of racial disparities in income using anonymized longitudinal data covering nearly the entire U.S. population from 1989 to 2015. We document three results. First, black Americans and American Indians have much lower rates of upward mobility and higher rates of downward mobility than whites, leading to persistent disparities across generations. Conditional on parent income, the black-white income gap is driven by differences in wages and employment rates between black and white men; there are no such differences between black and white women. Hispanic Americans have rates of intergenerational mobility more similar to whites than blacks, leading the Hispanic-white income gap to…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 177.10
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 76
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- White (mutation)
- Poverty
- Demography
- Race (biology)
- Population
- Demographic economics
- Social mobility
- Panel Study of Income Dynamics
- No poverty