Title: Zolt
1What are the determinants of intergenerational
mobility in Hungary? Comparing municipalities
and periods before and during modernization
- Social Stratification Research Seminar 2010
- Utrecht, the Netherlands
- 10 09 2010
- Zoltán Lippényi
- ICS/Utrecht University
2Comparative intergenerational mobility back to
the past
- Towards open societies project (Marco van
Leeuwen, - Ineke Maas, ICS/UU/IISH)
- Long-term intergenerational mobility in several
historical contexts - Is there a trend towards increasing
intergenerational occupational mobility? - Could changes in occupational mobility be
explained by industrialization, urbanization, and
institutional development?
3Intergenerational mobility in Hungary, 19th-20th
Century
- Previous research communism, transition 1989
(Szelényi, 1998 Bukodi Róbert, 2004) - modernization increases from second half of
the 19th Century (Berend Ránki, 1982) - Austro-Hungarian Monarchy (1867-1918)
- agricultural society with large farming
underclass - immobility of agricultural classes decline
- regional and municipal differences in
modernization (Beluszky Gyori, 2005) - growing distances on the urban ladder
4Collecting mobility data from the past
- Data collection 60 Hungarian municipalities
- Marriage records (1850-1950)
- Sampling town and village typologies based on
data from the 1930 Hungarian census - Two-stage selection
- 1. towns from different macro-regions
- 2. two-three villages from the towns
micro-region
5- Municipal centers industrial centers agrarian
centers
6Preliminary results
- Kalocsa (Mid-Hungary) and its rural outskirts
- 15-20.000 residents, primarily agrarian
- Marriages 1895-1950
- men, aged 18 -40
- N 2,247
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8Data quality - coverage
- Population Kalocsa residents who lived in the
town at the time of their marriage - Unit non-response
- Never got married
- Hajnal-line marriage almost universal in most
Hungary (Hajnal, 1965) - Married outside church
- Secularization began in the 1950s
- Married in another city
- Hungary joint household formation system
(Hajnal, 1982) - Item non-response
- occupation of the father missing
- Fathers early death Van Poppel and Van Gaalen
(2008) found no social status effect
9Data quality reliability
- Comparability of fathers occupation with that of
the son - different life stage at time of measurement
overestimating downward mobility/immobility - Class differences in marital age could confound
with change over time in mobility - E.g. sons of farmers marry at older age
increasingly over time relative to other classes
? greater mobility from agricultural origin - Additional analyses famers and farm workers
marry earlier, but no time effect and no
origin-destination classtime effect on age at
marriage - Quality of occupational measurement
- more detailed titles ? more mobility observed
10Occupations
- Occupational origin and destination
- HISCO (Van Leeuwen, Maas, Miles, 2002)
historically comparable occupational coding
scheme - HISCLASS 6 categories
- Higher managers and professionals
- Lower managers and professionals
- Foremen and skilled workers
- Farmers
- Lower/unskilled workers
- Lower/unskilled farm workers
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13Methods and model specification
- Multinomial conditional logit model (Breen,
1994 Hendrickx Ganzeboom, 1998 Wu Treiman,
2007) - Quasi-equal row and column effects 2 model
- Equal scaled metric for origins and destinations
- Origin-destination association
- Scaled association parameter
- Immobility
- Overall immobility parameter (diagonal)
- Immobility parameter for agricultural classes
- Control covariates
- Immigrants
- Rural outskirts
14Model selection
Model LR chi2 (diff) Df (diff) P BIC (diff)
Baseline class-specific intercepts association immobility covariates 3366 11 4790
M1 Baseline time-varying intercepts -199.5 5 .000 -152
M2 M1 time-varying association and immobility parameters -33.35 3 .000 -5
M3 M2 time-varying association and immobility, separate for outskirts -7.36 3 0.06 21
M4 M1 time-varying immobility parameters -33.24 2 .000 -15
M5 M1 time-varying overall immobility -32.28 1 .000 -23
15Parameter estimates M5Scaled metric
Higher managers and professionals -0.63
Lower managers/ professionals -0.29
Foremen/skilled workers -0.07
Lower skilled/unskilled workers -0.02
Farmers 0.50
Farm workers 0.51
16Parameter estimates M5
Origin-destination association 4.56
Immobility 1.55
Agricultural immobility .86
Time Higher managers and professionals -.001
Time Lower managers/ professionals -.004
Time Foremen/skilled workers -.027
Time Lower skilled/unskilled workers REF
Time Farmers -.048
Time Farm workers -.062
Immobilitytime -.02
17Modernization and mobility
- Indicators collected from gazetteers and census
sources - Population size (per 100 inhabitants)
- 7 censuses 1890, 1900, 1910, 1921, 1930, 1940,
1948 - Other years linear interpolation
- Yearly modernization-index (per 1000 inhabitants)
- number of institutions in a given year (bank,
hospital, tax office) - number of schools
- number of larger industrial establishments
- High correlations separate models (time excluded)
18Results
- Model 5 Baseline main effects immobility
interaction
MODERNIZATION
Modernization immobility -.30
LR2 (17) 3510, plt.000, BIC4703
POPULATION
Populationimmobility -.03
LR2 (17) 3517.17, plt.000, BIC4697
19Conclusion
- Evidence of changing mobility regime before
communism declining immobility (1.3 per year) - Similar decline in immobility for agricultural
and non-agricultural classes - No change in overall association and difference
- between city and its rural outskirts
- Modernization and population size decreasing
inheritance
20Future plans
- More contexts municipal level variation in
modernity - Multilevel modeling combine MCL-estimates from
several municipalities in meta analysis - Comparability of vital records with
representative survey data for the same period - Urban centers and villages in their
micro-regions residential and intergenerational
mobility - Hungary, a multiconfessional land
intergenerational mobility and religion
21Thank you for your attention!
22Controls and additional model specifications
Immigrant (Stereotyped ordered effect)
Outskirt residentagricultural occupation
Outskirt residentindustrial occupation _
Father dead at time of marriage n.s.
Aged 14 between 1914 and 1924 (1st World War) n.s.
Quadratic time-specification n.s.
Leave out post 1945 marriages identical results
23The statistical model
- logit(pj/pk) aj ak (fj fk)(µ0 ? µtXt)
fv (ßjt ßkt)Xt - ? fj0, ? fj2 1
- Stereotyped ordered effect
- (fj fk) ? ßmXm
- Estimation Iteratively fj scaling metric ?? ß
parameters