The great Gatsby curve and the Carnegie effect
Alonso Carrera, Jaime (Universidad de Vigo)
Caballé, Jordi (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
Raurich, Xavier (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)

Publicación: Barcelona: BSE Working Papers, 2024
Resumen: We show that US commuting zones with higher income inequality exhibit less upward social mobility at the bottom of the income distribution, more downward social mobility at the top, and lower average income. We explain this empirical evidence through a life-cycle model in which investment in education and effort increase labor income, and individuals are altruistic, suffer disutility from exerting effort, and face a credit constraint. We propose two mechanisms driving those findings. First, due to the credit constraint, investment in education and income of individuals born into low-income families is constrained by parental wealth, which explains that upward social mobility at the bottom is lower in commuting zones with higher inequality where low-income families have less wealth. Second, individuals born into a­ffluent families exert less effort and earn lower labor income when they inherit a larger wealth, which explains that downward social mobility at the top is larger in the most unequal commuting zones where affuent families are wealthier.
Ayudas: Agencia Estatal de Investigación PID2021-124015NB-I00
Agencia Estatal de Investigación PID2021-122605NB-I00
Agencia Estatal de Investigación PID2021-126549NB-I00
Derechos: Tots els drets reservats.
Lengua: Anglès
Colección: BSE working paper; 1451
Documento: Working paper ; recerca ; Versió publicada
Materia: Inequality ; Social mobility ; Education ; Effort
Publicado en: BSE Barcelona School of Economics Working Papers, 2024

Adreça alternativa: https://bse.eu/research/working-papers/great-gatsby-curve-and-carnegie-effect


40 p, 1.9 MB

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Documentos de investigación > Working papers

 Registro creado el 2024-07-04, última modificación el 2024-07-25



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