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Income Mobility

Income Mobility. February 14, 2008. What is income mobility and why is it important?. Income mobility refers to the amount of movement across income ranks experienced by persons or families

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Income Mobility

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  1. Income Mobility February 14, 2008

  2. What is income mobility and why is it important? • Income mobility refers to the amount of movement across income ranks experienced by persons or families • the simplest measure of economic mobility is the percentage of individuals who move into a new income quintile. • Easiest to use Social Security earnings records to follow persons • Income mobility is important because it offsets inequality. Increasing inequality might be accepted if it were accompanied by increasing mobility.

  3. How much income mobility is there in the U.S.? • Method: • In a base year, rank all incomes in the sample from highest to lowest, and then break them into five equal-sized income quintiles, with the top twenty percent in the highest quintile, etc. Then do the same to the incomes of the same individuals in a later year, breaking them into equal quintiles, and then examining the relative movement of individuals within the distribution • Estimates vary. • See Daniel P. McMurrer and Isabel V. Sawhill, Economic Mobility in the United States, at http://www.urban.org/publications/406722.html

  4. How much income mobility is there in the U.S.? • Gottschalk (1996) finds that between 1974 and 1991, 62 percent of individuals age 16 or over in 1975 moved to a different quintile • 58 percent for those originally in the lowest quintile • 56 percent for those in the highest • In the one year between 1974 and 1975, 39 percent moved to a different quintile (33 percent of the lowest quintile, 21 percent of the highest).

  5. Table 2. Income Mobility Transition Matrix, 1968-91

  6. Intra-generational Income Mobility in the U.S.:How often do the children of the poor become rich? Source: The Century Fund, Rags to Riches: The American Dream is Less Common in the United States than Elsewhere http://www.inequality.org/teach.cfm

  7. Income Mobility in the U.S.: Similarities in Fathers and Sons Incomes Source: The Century Fund, Rags to Riches: The American Dream is Less Common in the United States than Elsewhere, http://www.inequality.org/teach.cfm

  8. Income Mobility in the U.S.: What explains the relationship of Fathers and Sons Incomes?

  9. How does income mobility in the U.S. compare to other developed nations?

  10. Conclusions about U.S. Income Mobility • There is broad agreement that income mobility in the U.S. is substantial and that life-time earnings are more evenly distributed than annual earnings. • About 25 to 40 percent of the American population moves into a new income quintile each year. • The rate increases with time approaching 60 percent over a ten years • Most people do not move very far. • Individuals with at least a college education are more likely to move up than any other group.

  11. Conclusions about U.S. Income Mobility • The mobility of those with little education has declined. • Mobility has not changed significantly over the past 25 years. • Mobility is no higher in the U.S. than in other developed countries • Source: Daniel McMurrer and Isabel Sawhill, Economic Mobility in the United States, Urban Institute,http://www.urban.org/publications/406722.html

  12. For Information about Income Inequality in the US See slide show at http://www.demos.org/inequality/ByNumbersMay31.pdf

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