收入不平等、机会公平与代际流动性

Income Inequality, Equality of Opportunity, and Intergenerational Mobility

Journal of Economic Perspectives · 2013
被引 1874 · 同刊同年前 2%
人大 A-ABS 4

中文导读

探讨高收入国家(尤其是美国)日益加剧的不平等如何限制年轻一代的经济流动性,分析家庭、劳动力市场和公共政策的作用,并解释为何美国代际流动性低于其他国家。

Abstract

My focus is on the degree to which increasing inequality in the high-income countries, particularly in the United States, is likely to limit economic mobility for the next generation of young adults. I discuss the underlying drivers of opportunity that generate the relationship between inequality and intergenerational mobility. The goal is to explain why America differs from other countries, how intergenerational mobility will change in an era of higher inequality, and how the process is different for the top 1 percent. I begin by presenting evidence that countries with more inequality at one point in time also experience less earnings mobility across the generations, a relationship that has been called “The Great Gatsby Curve.” The interaction between families, labor markets, and public policies all structure a child's opportunities and determine the extent to which adult earnings are related to family background—but they do so in different ways across national contexts. Both cross-country comparisons and the underlying trends suggest that these drivers are all configured most likely to lower, or at least not raise, the degree of intergenerational earnings mobility for the next generation of Americans coming of age in a more polarized labor market. This trend will likely continue unless there are changes in public policy that promote the human capital of children in a way that offers relatively greater benefits to the relatively disadvantaged.

收入不平等机会均等代际流动性大盖茨比曲线