issue Inequality & Mobility

Equitable Growth supports research and policy analysis on how trends in economic inequality and mobility and changes in the economy have affected the concentration of wealth, income, and earnings, and how these distributional shifts have affected the promise of economic security and opportunity.

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During the mid-20th century, strong economic growth was broadly shared, as incomes increased and children could expect a better quality of life than their parents, though significant disparities across demographic groups remained. In recent decades, wealth, income, and earnings inequality have been rising and mobility declining, and demographic disparities persist. Better understanding these trends and their implications for economic growth will inform evidence-backed policies that improve growth and mobility for people across incomes, regions, and demographic groups.

Featured Research

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Analyzing recent U.S. economic policies using Equitable Growth’s Inequality Tracker

Inequality & Mobility
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Equitable Growth event highlights the path forward to rebuild the U.S. administrative state

Inequality & Mobility
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Uncertainty created by ever-changing tariff policies harms U.S. economic growth

Tax & MacroeconomicsInequality & Mobility
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Federal data is under attack, but data users can work together to preserve and democratize it

Inequality & MobilityLabor
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Factsheet: U.S. economic mobility and policies to increase upward mobility

Inequality & MobilityTax & Macroeconomics
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Six charts that explain how inequality in the United States changed over the past 20 years

Inequality & Mobility
TOPICS: 1
TOPICS: GDP 2.0

Explore Content in Inequality & Mobility2782

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A Video of an Event with Thomas Piketty, Author of “Capital in the 21st Century””

Inequality & Mobility
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Understanding how raising the federal minimum wage affects income inequality and economic growth

Inequality & MobilityLabor
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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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Economics Research and the State of the Union

Inequality & MobilityFamiliesLabor
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A Better Headline Would be “Mobility Stagnant as U.S. Economy Doubles”

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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Here’s to wishing you the best of luck in the birth lottery—you’re going to need it

Inequality & Mobility
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Guest Post: Data Mash-up — Manufacturing and Economic Mobility

Inequality & Mobility
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Guest post by WCEG Executive Director Heather Boushey: What if there is no trade off?

Inequality & Mobility
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John Podesta: Income inequality’s ripple effect

Inequality & Mobility
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An extended chat with Robert M. Solow

Inequality & Mobility

Experts on the issue

Grantee

E. Mark Curtis

Wake Forest University

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Grantee

Heather Sarsons

University of Chicago

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Guest Author

Matto Mildenberger

University of California, Santa Barbara

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Grantee

Micah Villarreal

University of California, Santa Barbara

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Grantee

Joan Williams

University of California, Hastings College of Law

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