Using SOEP-PSID data we analyze the impact of human capital and family background characteristics on intergenerational income mobility for two age cohorts in Germany and the United States. The results reveal a higher intergenerational persistence of economic status and a more pronounced influence of family background characteristics on income mobility pattems in the United States. The intergenerational transition matrices corroborate these results, indicating that much of the intergenerational income immobility is due to from what occurs in the tails of the income distribution. The results do not confirm the traditional social role pattems in Germany and a higher social mobility of the American society
Social scientists and policy analysts have long expressed concern about the extent of intergeneratio...
International studies of the extent to which economic status is passed from one generation to the ne...
Intergenerational mobility has long been an area of interest for many economists and sociologists. I...
Using SOEP-PSID data we analyze the impact of human capital and family background characteristics on...
Based on longitudinal data from the Cross-National Equivalent File 1980 – 2008 (CNEF 1980 – 2008) th...
Based on longitudinal data from the Cross-National Equivalent File 1980⁻2016 (CNEF 1980⁻...
International studies of the extent to which economic status is passed from one generation to the ne...
Using longitudinal data on fathers and their children, this study compares the extent of intergenera...
Based on data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and the Socio-economic Panel, we study the cla...
Using the Shorrocks R, we compare trends in intragenerational income mobility for the western states...
Abstract This paper examines the similarity in the association between earnings of sons and fathers ...
We characterize intergenerational mobility in Germany using census data on educational attainment an...
Abstract The United States is often considered to be more free-wheeling and mobile than Germany; how...
This thesis is divided into three main chapters. The first chapter provides an analysis of intergen...
Using harmonized household survey data, we analyse long run social mobility in the US, the UK, and G...
Social scientists and policy analysts have long expressed concern about the extent of intergeneratio...
International studies of the extent to which economic status is passed from one generation to the ne...
Intergenerational mobility has long been an area of interest for many economists and sociologists. I...
Using SOEP-PSID data we analyze the impact of human capital and family background characteristics on...
Based on longitudinal data from the Cross-National Equivalent File 1980 – 2008 (CNEF 1980 – 2008) th...
Based on longitudinal data from the Cross-National Equivalent File 1980⁻2016 (CNEF 1980⁻...
International studies of the extent to which economic status is passed from one generation to the ne...
Using longitudinal data on fathers and their children, this study compares the extent of intergenera...
Based on data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and the Socio-economic Panel, we study the cla...
Using the Shorrocks R, we compare trends in intragenerational income mobility for the western states...
Abstract This paper examines the similarity in the association between earnings of sons and fathers ...
We characterize intergenerational mobility in Germany using census data on educational attainment an...
Abstract The United States is often considered to be more free-wheeling and mobile than Germany; how...
This thesis is divided into three main chapters. The first chapter provides an analysis of intergen...
Using harmonized household survey data, we analyse long run social mobility in the US, the UK, and G...
Social scientists and policy analysts have long expressed concern about the extent of intergeneratio...
International studies of the extent to which economic status is passed from one generation to the ne...
Intergenerational mobility has long been an area of interest for many economists and sociologists. I...