Data and Code for: African American Intergenerational Economic Mobility Since 1880 -- Collins and Wanamaker (2021)
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) William J. Collins, Vanderbilt University; Marianne H. Wanamaker, University of Tennessee
Version: View help for Version V1
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text/plain | 2.1 KB | 04/19/2021 11:52:AM |
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application/pdf | 147.7 KB | 06/24/2021 08:19:AM |
Project Citation:
Collins, William J., and Wanamaker, Marianne H. Data and Code for: African American Intergenerational Economic Mobility Since 1880 -- Collins and Wanamaker (2021). Nashville, TN: American Economic Association [publisher], 2022. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2022-06-15. https://doi.org/10.3886/E128442V1
Project Description
Summary:
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Code required to replicate results in "
African American Intergenerational Economic Mobility Since
1880", published in American Economic Journal: Applied.
Abstract: We document the
intergenerational mobility of black and white American men from 1880 through
2000 by building new historical datasets and combining them with modern data to
cover the middle and late twentieth century. We find large disparities, with
white children having far better chances of escaping the bottom of the income
distribution than black children in every generation. This mobility gap was more important in
proximately determining each generation’s racial income gap than was the gap in
parents’ economic status. Evidence
suggests that human capital disparities, conditional on parents’ status,
underpinned a substantial part of the mobility gap. [99 words]
Funding Sources:
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National Science Foundation (SES 1156085 and 1156057)
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
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economic history;
inequality;
intergenerational mobility
JEL Classification:
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N30 Economic History: Labor and Consumers, Demography, Education, Health, Welfare, Income, Wealth, Religion, and Philanthropy: General, International, or Comparative
N30 Economic History: Labor and Consumers, Demography, Education, Health, Welfare, Income, Wealth, Religion, and Philanthropy: General, International, or Comparative
Geographic Coverage:
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United Sates
Time Period(s):
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1/1/1880 – 1/1/2000
Data Type(s):
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program source code
Methodology
Data Source:
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Underlying data sources (none posted here):
Occupational Change in a Generation (ICPSR study 6162)
National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979
100% count files of the U.S. Census of Population available from Ancestry.com, via IPUMS (1900, 1910, and 1930 versions)
100% count file of the U.S. Census of Population available from IPUMS-International (1880)
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