Economists are not known for their literary imaginations. Flip through any economics textbook and you’ll find a barrage of terms like the ‘Philips curve’ and the ‘Fisher effect’. The jargon is simple enough — empirical relations are usually named after the person who discovered them. But this convention is neither descriptive nor fun. The exception to this vanilla naming practice is a pattern called the ‘Great Gatsby curve’.1 It’s named after F. Scott Fitzgerald’s famous book The Great Gatsby, which explores the roiling inequality and tumultuous class dynamics of the 1920s. The Great Gatsby curve is an empirical relation between social inequality and social mobility. As inequality rises, social mobility tends to decline. In this post,...
Where did Fitzgerald get the idea of having Clay's Economics reside in Nick Carraway's library?
Findings from a recent study by Neil Cummins and a colleague suggest that social mobility in modern ...
This essay illustrates the application of reception study, the subfield of literary history that emp...
Economists are not known for their literary imaginations. Flip through any economics textbook and yo...
The rich get richer. It’s a phrase that packs a lot of punch. It’s potent rhetoric, yet surprisin...
The Great Gatsby Curve measures the relationship between income inequality and intergenerational inc...
There’s an old joke that economics is too important to be left to economists. In the same vein, I th...
The richest 1 percent in the United States is a largely unexplored group, despite its everincreasing...
Income inequality and intergenerational mobility are two common measures of economic fairness in soc...
Have you ever wondered what it takes to become a billionaire? Do you need rare genius? Exceptional a...
A long-standing interest in the relationship between inequality and sustainable growth continues to ...
There has been an enormous upward redistribution of income in the United States in the last four dec...
The popularity of Thomas Piketty?s research on wealth inequality has drawn attention to a curious qu...
This thesis examines how F. Scott Fitzgerald portrays the American Dream in his fiction and how he e...
This is a mirror, deposited with MPRA for completeness, of the same paper at the Social Science Rese...
Where did Fitzgerald get the idea of having Clay's Economics reside in Nick Carraway's library?
Findings from a recent study by Neil Cummins and a colleague suggest that social mobility in modern ...
This essay illustrates the application of reception study, the subfield of literary history that emp...
Economists are not known for their literary imaginations. Flip through any economics textbook and yo...
The rich get richer. It’s a phrase that packs a lot of punch. It’s potent rhetoric, yet surprisin...
The Great Gatsby Curve measures the relationship between income inequality and intergenerational inc...
There’s an old joke that economics is too important to be left to economists. In the same vein, I th...
The richest 1 percent in the United States is a largely unexplored group, despite its everincreasing...
Income inequality and intergenerational mobility are two common measures of economic fairness in soc...
Have you ever wondered what it takes to become a billionaire? Do you need rare genius? Exceptional a...
A long-standing interest in the relationship between inequality and sustainable growth continues to ...
There has been an enormous upward redistribution of income in the United States in the last four dec...
The popularity of Thomas Piketty?s research on wealth inequality has drawn attention to a curious qu...
This thesis examines how F. Scott Fitzgerald portrays the American Dream in his fiction and how he e...
This is a mirror, deposited with MPRA for completeness, of the same paper at the Social Science Rese...
Where did Fitzgerald get the idea of having Clay's Economics reside in Nick Carraway's library?
Findings from a recent study by Neil Cummins and a colleague suggest that social mobility in modern ...
This essay illustrates the application of reception study, the subfield of literary history that emp...