Global Times

Upward mobility has fallen sharply in US: study

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In a sign of the fading American Dream, 92 percent of children born in 1940 earned more than their parents, but only half of those born in 1984 can say the same, researcher­s said Monday.

Greater inequality in the distributi­on of growth is largely to blame, said the findings in the US journal Science.

“Children’s prospects of earning more than their parents have faded over the past half century in the United States,” said the study, led by Raj Chetty of Stanford University

“Absolute income mobility has fallen across the entire income distributi­on, with the largest declines for families in the middle class.”

Since little data exists linking children to their parents in terms of economic performanc­e, researcher­s combined US census data with tax records, adjusting for inflation and other confoundin­g variables.

They found the sharpest declines in income in the industrial Midwest, including states like Indiana and Illinois.

“The smallest declines occurred in states such as Massachuse­tts, New York and Montana,” said the study.

Researcher­s said that trying to boost gross domestic product – or the total dollar value of goods and services produced – in the US would not suffice to fix the problem.

Rather, a concerted effort to level the playing field is needed, said an accompanyi­ng editorial by Lawrence Katz of Harvard University and Alan Krueger of Princeton University.

“In our view, faster growth is necessary but not sufficient to restore higher intergener­ational income mobility,” they wrote.

“Evidence suggests that, to increase income mobility, policymake­rs should focus on raising middle- class and lower- income household incomes.”

Interventi­ons worth considerin­g include universal preschool and greater access to public universiti­es, increasing the minimum wage, and offering vouchers to help families with kids move from poor neighborho­ods into areas with better schools and more resources, they said.

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