This article shows that across multiple generations, the persistence of occupational and educational attainment in Germany is larger than estimates from two generations suggest. We consider two recent interpretations. First, we assess Gregory Clark's hypotheses that the true rate of intergenerational persistence is higher than the observed rate, as high as 0.75, and time-invariant. Our evidence supports the first but not the other two hypotheses. Second, we test for independent effects of grandparents. We show that the coefficient on grandparent status is positive in a wide class of Markovian models and present evidence against its causal interpretation.
%0 Journal Article
%1 braun2017transmission
%A Braun, Sebastian Till
%A Stuhler, Jan
%D 2017
%J The Economic Journal
%K use:doi:10.5157/NEPS:SC6:5.1.0
%P 576-611
%R 10.1111/ecoj.12453
%T The Transmission of Inequality Across Multiple Generations: Testing Recent Theories with Evidence from Germany
%U http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ecoj.12453/full
%V 128(609)
%X This article shows that across multiple generations, the persistence of occupational and educational attainment in Germany is larger than estimates from two generations suggest. We consider two recent interpretations. First, we assess Gregory Clark's hypotheses that the true rate of intergenerational persistence is higher than the observed rate, as high as 0.75, and time-invariant. Our evidence supports the first but not the other two hypotheses. Second, we test for independent effects of grandparents. We show that the coefficient on grandparent status is positive in a wide class of Markovian models and present evidence against its causal interpretation.
@article{braun2017transmission,
abstract = {This article shows that across multiple generations, the persistence of occupational and educational attainment in Germany is larger than estimates from two generations suggest. We consider two recent interpretations. First, we assess Gregory Clark's hypotheses that the true rate of intergenerational persistence is higher than the observed rate, as high as 0.75, and time-invariant. Our evidence supports the first but not the other two hypotheses. Second, we test for independent effects of grandparents. We show that the coefficient on grandparent status is positive in a wide class of Markovian models and present evidence against its causal interpretation.},
added-at = {2018-03-09T11:44:57.000+0100},
author = {Braun, Sebastian Till and Stuhler, Jan},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2f6ff4457f6c471d5b3a1fda2f8050a9b/neps.dc},
doi = {10.1111/ecoj.12453},
interhash = {30c27164da577dcbdcf00cb4d288d025},
intrahash = {f6ff4457f6c471d5b3a1fda2f8050a9b},
journal = {The Economic Journal},
keywords = {use:doi:10.5157/NEPS:SC6:5.1.0},
month = mar,
pages = {576-611},
timestamp = {2018-03-09T11:44:57.000+0100},
title = {The Transmission of Inequality Across Multiple Generations: Testing Recent Theories with Evidence from Germany},
url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ecoj.12453/full},
volume = {128(609)},
year = 2017
}