» Articles » PMID: 36688006

Heterogeneous Effects of Intergenerational Social Mobility: An Improved Method and New Evidence

Overview
Journal Am Sociol Rev
Specialty Social Sciences
Date 2023 Jan 23
PMID 36688006
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

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. We propose an improved method, called the "mobility contrast model" (MCM). Using simulation evidence, we demonstrated 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. We revisited the debate about the effect of mobility on fertility and analyzed 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 both previous models and the MCM. The MCM suggested 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 were difficult to pinpoint using previous methods because mobility effects of different magnitudes and opposite directions among mobility groups may cancel 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.

Citing Articles

For Whom Does Education Convey Health Benefits? A Two-Generation and Life Course Approach.

Luo L, Wei L J Health Soc Behav. 2024; 65(4):596-617.

PMID: 38832718 PMC: 11622520. DOI: 10.1177/00221465241249120.


Association between Social Mobility and Quality-of-Life Index in Women of Rasht: A Population-Based Study in the Iranian Context.

Namazi A, Rafiey H, Mousavi M, Setareh Forouzan A, Ghaedamini Harouni G Med J Islam Repub Iran. 2023; 37:98.

PMID: 38021381 PMC: 10657264. DOI: 10.47176/mjiri.37.98.


The heterogeneous well-being effects of intergenerational mobility perceptions.

Gugushvili A J Health Psychol. 2023; 29(2):99-112.

PMID: 37466150 PMC: 11378449. DOI: 10.1177/13591053231187345.


The mobility effects hypothesis: Methods and applications.

Zang E, Sobel M, Luo L Soc Sci Res. 2023; 110:102818.

PMID: 36796994 PMC: 9936082. DOI: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2022.102818.


Social mobility and biological aging among older adults in the United States.

Graf G, Zhang Y, Domingue B, Harris K, Kothari M, Kwon D PNAS Nexus. 2022; 1(2):pgac029.

PMID: 35615471 PMC: 9123172. DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac029.

References
1.
De Freitas C, Buckley R, Klimo R, Daniel J, Mountjoy M, Vanstone M . Admissions experiences of aspiring physicians from low-income backgrounds. Med Educ. 2021; 55(7):840-849. DOI: 10.1111/medu.14462. View

2.
Cheng S, Tamborini C, Kim C, Sakamoto A . Educational Variations in Cohort Trends in the Black-White Earnings Gap Among Men: Evidence From Administrative Earnings Data. Demography. 2019; 56(6):2253-2277. DOI: 10.1007/s13524-019-00827-w. View

3.
Houle J, Martin M . Does intergenerational mobility shape psychological distress? Sorokin revisited. Res Soc Stratif Mobil. 2014; 29(2):193-203. PMC: 4139926. DOI: 10.1016/j.rssm.2010.11.001. View

4.
Schuck B, Steiber N . Does Intergenerational Educational Mobility Shape the Well-Being of Young Europeans? Evidence from the European Social Survey. Soc Indic Res. 2018; 139(3):1237-1255. PMC: 6156761. DOI: 10.1007/s11205-017-1753-7. View

5.
Westoff C . The changing focus of differential fertility research: the social mobility hypothesis. Milbank Mem Fund Q. 1953; 31(1):24-38. View