Topic Economic Mobility

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.

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In Conversation

In Conversation with Miles Corak

Inequality & Mobility
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U.S. economic mobility trends and outcomes

Inequality & Mobility
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Wealth as a driver of income and consumption mobility in the United States

Inequality & MobilityFamilies
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New research suggests that social circles affect upward mobility among U.S. children and young adults

Inequality & Mobility
Vision 2020

Race and the lack of intergenerational economic mobility in the United States

Inequality & MobilityTax & MacroeconomicsLabor
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Factsheet: What the research says about the economic impacts of reproductive care

Inequality & MobilityFamiliesLabor

Explore Content in Economic Mobility386

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What do trends in economic inequality imply for innovation and entrepreneurship?

Inequality & Mobility
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What about commuting to new economic opportunities?

Inequality & Mobility
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The importance of where you live for U.S. economic mobility

Inequality & MobilityFamilies
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Today’s big U.S. economic trade-off isn’t equality or efficiency

Inequality & Mobility
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The economic and fiscal consequences of improving U.S. educational outcomes

Inequality & MobilityFamilies
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Patterns of economic mobility in the United States

Inequality & Mobility
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Marriage promotion isn’t the only solution to America’s mobility problem

Inequality & Mobility
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A regional look at single moms and upward mobility

Inequality & Mobility
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Separate and unequal mobility

Inequality & Mobility
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A response to another attack on the Great Gatsby curve—and can we call it the “line to serfdom” instead?

Inequality & Mobility
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When Measuring Mobility, Location Still Matters

Inequality & Mobility
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A Mathematical Response to Scott Winship’s Analysis of The Great Gatsby Curve

Inequality & Mobility
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