Economic mobility measures the relationship between a parent and child’s economic outcomes, usually in terms of income. Too often, an individual’s economic outcome in the United States is determined by parental resources, race, and privilege, rather than individual effort and talent. In addition, rising economic inequality over the past several decades means that the consequences of stalled or falling economic mobility have gotten worse. Equitable Growth seeks to understand how today’s inequalities could be foreclosing equality of opportunity for future generations.
Featured work
Wealth as a driver of income and consumption mobility in the United States
June 7, 2023
June 7, 2023
New research suggests that social circles affect upward mobility among U.S. children and young adults
September 7, 2022
September 7, 2022
Race and the lack of intergenerational economic mobility in the United States
February 18, 2020
February 18, 2020
Factsheet: What the research says about the economic impacts of reproductive care
June 27, 2022
June 27, 2022
Explore Content in Economic Mobility403
HBCU Enrollment and Longer-Term Outcomes
November 20, 2023
November 20, 2023
New evidence suggests that receiving benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program facilitates work in the long run
November 13, 2023
November 13, 2023
Wage and Skills’ Spillover Effects of Million Dollar Projects
August 30, 2023
August 30, 2023
Long Term Own and Dynamic Complementarity Effects of the WIC Program
August 30, 2023
August 30, 2023
Missing pieces in the puzzle: Leveraging untapped archival data to connect New Deal housing policies to racial and spatial inequality
August 30, 2023
August 30, 2023
Does guaranteed income facilitate wealth and credit building among Black households in Georgia?
August 30, 2023
August 30, 2023
Latino homeownership: Confronting home appraisal bias to create a more equitable and more sustainable U.S. economic trajectory
August 10, 2023
August 10, 2023
Disparities in Pollution Capitalization Rates: The Role of Direct and Systemic Discrimination
July 20, 2023
July 20, 2023
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