TY - JOUR
T1 - Heterogeneous Effects of Intergenerational Social Mobility
T2 - An Improved Method and New Evidence
AU - Luo, Liying
N1 - Funding Information:
This study benefited from support provided by the Population Research Institute (NICHD P2CHD041025) and the Social Science Research Institute, the Pennsylvania State University. I thank Kira England, Andrew Halpern-Manners, James Hodges, John Iceland, Molly Martin, Susan McHale, Janet Novack, Léa Pessin, Michael Sobel, Jennifer Van Hook, and John Robert Warren for their helpful comments. I would also like to thank the editors and four anonymous reviewers, whose comments greatly strengthened the research. Earlier versions of this article were presented at the RC 28 Spring Meeting (March 2019, Frankfurt, Germany) and the annual meetings of the Population Association of America (April 2019, Austin).
Publisher Copyright:
© American Sociological Association 2021.
PY - 2022/2
Y1 - 2022/2
N2 - Intergenerational social mobility has immense implications for individuals’ well-being, attitudes, and behaviors. However, previous methods may be unreliable for estimating heterogeneous mobility effects, especially in the presence of moderate- or large-scale intergenerational mobility. I propose an improved method, called the “mobility contrast model” (MCM). Using simulation evidence, I demonstrate that the MCM is more flexible and reliable for estimating and testing heterogeneous mobility effects, and the results are robust to the scale of intergenerational mobility. I revisit the debate about the effect of mobility on fertility and analyze data from the 1962 Occupational Changes in a Generation Study (OCG-1) and more recent data from the 1974 through 2018 General Social Survey (GSS) using previous models and the MCM. The MCM suggests a small association between fertility and occupational mobility in the GSS data but substantial and heterogeneous educational mobility effects on fertility in the OCG-1 and the GSS. Such effects are difficult to pinpoint using previous methods because mobility effects of different magnitudes and opposite directions among mobility groups may cancel each other out. The new method can be extended to investigate the effect of intergenerational mobility across multiple generations and other research areas, including immigrant assimilation and heterogamy.
AB - Intergenerational social mobility has immense implications for individuals’ well-being, attitudes, and behaviors. However, previous methods may be unreliable for estimating heterogeneous mobility effects, especially in the presence of moderate- or large-scale intergenerational mobility. I propose an improved method, called the “mobility contrast model” (MCM). Using simulation evidence, I demonstrate that the MCM is more flexible and reliable for estimating and testing heterogeneous mobility effects, and the results are robust to the scale of intergenerational mobility. I revisit the debate about the effect of mobility on fertility and analyze data from the 1962 Occupational Changes in a Generation Study (OCG-1) and more recent data from the 1974 through 2018 General Social Survey (GSS) using previous models and the MCM. The MCM suggests a small association between fertility and occupational mobility in the GSS data but substantial and heterogeneous educational mobility effects on fertility in the OCG-1 and the GSS. Such effects are difficult to pinpoint using previous methods because mobility effects of different magnitudes and opposite directions among mobility groups may cancel each other out. The new method can be extended to investigate the effect of intergenerational mobility across multiple generations and other research areas, including immigrant assimilation and heterogamy.
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U2 - 10.1177/00031224211052028
DO - 10.1177/00031224211052028
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85120462485
SN - 0003-1224
VL - 87
SP - 143
EP - 173
JO - American Sociological Review
JF - American Sociological Review
IS - 1
ER -