Title: 4a. Intergenerational Mobility
14a. Intergenerational Mobility
2Empirical Evidence
- Best guesses.
- Sons whose fathers were unemployed when they
were young are twice as likely to experience and
unemployment spell when they reach adulthood - and moreover the spells tend to be longer
- ONeill, D and O.Sweetman (1998)
Intergenerational Mobility in Britain Evidence
from Unemployment Patterns, Oxford Bulletin of
Economics and Statistics, vol. 60, no. 4
(November). pp. 431-449
3Empirical Evidence (continued)
- Earnings Advantage
- Suppose we write relationship between sons and
fathers earnings as - In the literature ß is called the
intergenerational earnings elasticity.
4- Now lets compare offspring of rich parents (YPR)
and poor parents (YPP). - We can show that on average
5Does the size of ß really matter?
- Lets assume that the earnings of the rich parent
is 5 times that of poor parent
6Empirical Evidence on size of ß
- Best Guesses
- United States .5
- United Kingdom .5
- Denmark .15
- Finland .18
- Norway .17
7Broader International Comparisons
8Empirical Evidence (Education)
9Additional Readings
- Miles Corak (2006) Do poor Children become poor
adults? Lessons from a Cross Country Comparison
of Generation Earnings Mobility, - IZA Discussion paper 1993http//ftp.iza.org/dp199
3.pdf - Hertz, T, T.Jayasundera, P. Piraino, S. Selcuk,
N.Smith, A. Verashchagina (2007) The
Inheritance of Educational Inequality
International Comparisons and Fifty-Year Trends
BE Journal of Economic Analysis and Policy
http//www.bepress.com/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article
1775contextbejeap - Solon, Gary (2004). A Model of Intergenerational
Mobility Variation over Time and Place.In Miles
Corak (editor). Generational Income Mobility in
North America and Europe. Cambridge Cambridge
University Press.
10TheorySolon, Gary (2004). A Model of
Intergenerational Mobility Variation over Time
and Place.In Miles Corak (editor). Generational
Income Mobility in North America and Europe.
Cambridge Cambridge University Press.
- Permanent Income Model ß0 abstracting from
genetic transfers of skills/preferences. - Introduce Borrowing Constraints.
- Education of child is financed by reducing own
consumption.
11Model
- Family i contains one parent of generation t-1
and one child of generation t. - Family must allocate parents lifetime after tax
earnings (1- )yi,t-1 between the parents own
consumption Ci,t-1 and investment in childs
human capital, Ii,t-1. - Assume that parents cannot borrow against the
childs prospective earnings and does not
bequeath financial assets to the child.
12Model (continued)
- The resulting budget constraint is
13Preferences
- Assume that parents preferences can be
represented by a Cobb-Douglas Utility function. - a captures parents levels of altruism.
14Technology
- The technology translating investment into human
capital is given by - ei,t denotes the initial endowment of the child
15Technology (continued)
- The childs income is determined by a semi-log
earnings function
16Solution
- Combining constraints and preferences, we can
rewrite the objective function as
17Interior Solution
- Implications
- High income parents invest more in their children
- Partial crowding out of private investment by
public investment - Investment increasing in a
- Investment increasing in ?p.
18Earnings Equation
19Nature of Government Transfers
- Assume
- Relative progressivity in public investment
provided gt0.
20Intergenerational Earnings Equation
- Looks like something we can estimate but
- error term not well behaved.
- Why not?
21What gets estimated?
- Assuming stationarity the probability limit of
the OLS estimator will equal - With a bit of work we can show that in our case
this amounts to
22Determinants of intergenerational elasticity
- The commonly estimated intergenerational
elasticity is greater as - The heritability coefficient ? is greater
- Human capital investment is more productive
- Returns to human capital is greater
- Public investment in human capital is less
progressive.
23Steady state Cross-Sectional Inequality
- A first order autoregression with first order
autoregressive error term can be written as a
second order autoregression with white noise
error term. This can be used to derive
cross-section variance
24More Developed Model
- Include financial transfers, uncertainty and the
possibility that not all families are borrowing
constrained. - Mulligan, C (1997) Parental Priorities and
Economic Inequality, Chapter 3, Appendix A. - Han. S and C. Mulligan (2001) Human Capital,
Heterogeneity and Estimated Degrees of
Intergenerational Mobility Economic Journal,
Vol. 111, pp. 207-243.