Mitnik, Pablo,
Victoria Bryant, and Michael Weber. 2019. “The Intergenerational Transmission
of Family-Income Advantages in the United States.” Sociological Science
6(15): 380-415.
Abstract
Estimates
of economic persistence and mobility in the United States, as measured by the
intergenerational elasticity (IGE), cover a very wide range. Nevertheless,
careful analyses of the evidence suggested until recently that as much as half,
and possibly more, of economic advantages are passed on from parents to
children. This “dominant hypothesis” was seriously challenged by the first-ever
study of family-income mobility based on tax data (Chetty et al. 2014), which
provided estimates of family-income IGEs indicating that only one-third of
economic advantages are transmitted across generations and claimed that
previous highly influential IGE estimates were upward biased. Using a different
tax-based data set, this article provides estimates of family-income IGEs that
strongly support the dominant hypothesis. The article also carries out a
one-to-one comparison between IGEs estimated with the two tax-based data sets
and shows that Chetty et al.’s estimates were driven downward by a combination
of attenuation, life-cycle, selection, and functional-form biases. Lastly, the
article determines the exact relationship between parental income inequality,
economic persistence, and inequality of opportunity for income. This leads to
the conclusion that, in the United States, at least half of income inequality
among parents is transformed into inequality of opportunity among their
children.