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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A cross-country analysis of the association between educational mobility and income inequality

Ragipi Rushid, Ajsuna January 2017 (has links)
The main objective of this paper is to investigate the relationship between intergenerational educational mobility and income inequality. Previous research suggests that this relationship is expected to be positive, i.e. high income inequality is associated with low intergenerational educational mobility. To estimate the association between the two specified variables data on educational mobility is taken from a previous study and data on the income inequality measure, the Gini coefficient is taken from the World Bank. A weighted least square regression shows that 0.10 increase in the Gini coefficient leads to a 0.135 increase in the measure of educational mobility. Moreover, one underlying mechanism for this certain linkage is inspected. Pearson correlation between public spending on education as a percent of GDP and educational mobility show a rather strong negative association suggesting that higher spending on education is related to higher educational mobility.
2

Who’s your daddy? A comparison of intergenerational mobility of socioeconomic status for sons and daughters

Drake, Angela 05 1900 (has links)
Intergenerational mobility is of interest to social scientists, in part due to the persistence of the quest for the “American Dream”. Intergenerational mobility is a gauge of the opportunities each group has to increase their privilege, class, and income. In addition, it helps researchers understand the way our society creates class structures. Many studies have addressed intergenerational mobility, focusing on socioeconomic status (socioeconomic status) of fathers and its effect on their sons. Other studies have looked at father’s effect on son’s and daughter’s occupational mobility, but the effect of father’s socioeconomic status on daughter’s socioeconomic status has been overlooked thus far. This study examined the intergenerational mobility of socioeconomic status and if there are differences in the transmission of father’s socioeconomic status to their sons and daughters. Secondary data analysis of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (1979-2002) was used for the analysis. A model was created in order to examine three sets of relevant theories: individual, structural, and gender-level. Univariate, bivariate and ordinary least squares (OLS) regression were utilized for analysis. Bivariate analysis shows that sons have higher socioeconomic status than daughters. OLS regression results indicate that father’s socioeconomic status has a positive effect on children’s socioeconomic status, net of other factors, but no statistical difference was found between sons and daughters. / Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Sociology
3

Begging the question : permanent income and social mobility

Muller, Seán Mfundza January 2007 (has links)
Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 35-37).
4

Catching Up? The educational mobility of migrants' and natives' children in Europe.

Oberdabernig, Doris Anita, Schneebaum, Alyssa 30 December 2016 (has links) (PDF)
Migrants into European countries are often less educated than European natives. We analyse whether migrants' children are more or less likely than natives' children to achieve upward educational mobility across generations, and study differences in the factors, which contribute to differences in mobility for the two groups. We find that migrants' descendants are more often upwardly mobile (and less often downwardly mobile) than their native peers in the majority of countries studied, and show that the main factor contributing to these patterns is the education level of parents. Although a lower parental education means that their children are less likely to access the same amount of human, social and financial capital as children of more highly educated parents, migrants' descendants over the last two generations were able to make significant progress in reducing education gaps with natives.
5

Opportunity for Whom? Sources of Integenerational Mobility in the U.S.

Timothy M Smith (6439250) 10 June 2019 (has links)
Economists generally consider intergenerational economic mobility to be an important feature of market economies, as it allows people born into poverty to achieve a measure of prosperity in the presence of minimal government intervention or redistribution. The empirical literature on mobility in the U.S. has, however, found evidence that mobility is lower than previously thought, and scholars have responded by developing expansive literatures on many aspects of intergenerational mobility, including studies of its origins. In this dissertation, I contribute to this strand of the literature by reviewing recent trends in the literature, with a particular emphasis on studies aimed at explaining the sources of mobility, and then discussing three empirical studies into specific sources of mobility, using data organized at different geographic and temporal scales. These empirical chapters focus on the role of different aspects of childhood poverty in determining income rank in adulthood, modeling variation in racial mobility gaps across different kinds of communities and local economies, and measuring the relationship between trends in intergenerational mobility and the structural transformation of agriculture in the 20th century U.S..
6

Mobilidade intergeracional de educação no Brasil / Intergenerational schooling mobility in Brazil

Paschoal, Izabela Palma 14 February 2008 (has links)
Estudos sobre mobilidade intergeracional de educação sugerem que países subdesenvolvidos apresentam menor mobilidade intergeracional que países desenvolvidos e especificamente para o Brasil, o grau de persistência estimado é ao redor de 0.7, podendo apresentar diferentes graus ao longo da distribuição de educação. Este estudo apresenta uma nova abordagem para a mensuração da mobilidade intergeracional utilizando Regressões Quantílicas. Especificamente, é proposta uma medida de distância entre os quantis condicionais para analisar a mobilidade intergeracional. Como resultado, é obtido um conjunto de matrizes que descrevem o padrão da mobilidade intergeracional em diferentes pontos da distribuição condicional de escolaridade. Utilizando dados para o Brasil, encontra-se que a mobilidade intergeracional tende a ser maior nas caudas da distribuição de escolaridade para filhos e filhas relativo à educação de pais e mães. Comparando filhos e filhas, os filhos tendem a ter menor mobilidade intergeracional que as mulheres relativo à educação de seus pais. Além do mais, a educação das mães tem maior efeito em magnitude do que a educação dos pais tanto para filhos quanto para as filhas. Também se encontrou que a educação dos filhos depende mais da educação do pai e a educação das filhas depende mais da educação das mães, indicando que os filhos tendem a ter educação similar à de seus pais e as filhas tendem a ter educação similar à de suas mães. / Studies on intergenerational educational mobility suggest that underdevelopment countries presents lower intergenerational mobility than developed countries and specifically for Brazil, the estimated degree of persistence is around 0.7 with possible different degrees on the overall distribution of education. This study presents a new approach to measuring intergenerational mobility using quantile regression. Specifically, it is proposed the use of a measure of distance between conditional quantiles to analyze intergenerational mobility. As a result, is obtained a set of matrices which describe the patterns of intergenerational mobility at different points of the conditional distribution of schooling. Using Brazilian Data (PNAD 1996) it is found that intergenerational mobility seems to be higher at the tails of the distribution of schooling for sons and daughters relative to father\'s and mother\'s education. Comparing each other, sons tend to have less mobility than daughters relative to father\'s education. Moreover, mother\'s education has stronger effects than father\'s on both sons and daughters education. It was also found that son\'s education depends more on father\'s education and daughter\'s education depends more on mother\'s education, indicating that sons tends to have education similar to their fathers and daughters tends to have education similar to their mothers.
7

Η δια-γενεακή κινητικότητα στο εκπαιδευτικό επίπεδο : η εμπειρία 14 χωρών της Ευρωπαϊκής Ένωσης

Γεωργαντοπούλου, Τασούλα 22 September 2009 (has links)
Στην παρούσα εργασία διερευνώνται διάφορες πτυχές της δια-γενεακής κινητικότητας της εκπαίδευσης σε 14 χώρες-μέλη της Ευρωπαϊκής Ένωσης (ΕΕ-14). Για το σκοπό αυτό χρησιμοποιούνται ατομικά στοιχεία από την βάση δεδομένων European Social Survey (ESS) και ιδιαίτερη έμφαση αποδίδεται στο επίπεδο της εκπαίδευσης που έχει ολοκληρωθεί τόσο από τα άτομα που αποτελούν την μονάδα ανάλυσης όσο και για τους γονείς τους ανεξάρτητα από το εάν οι τελευταίοι καταγράφονται ή όχι στην χρησιμοποιούμενη βάση δεδομένων. Με βάση τα αποτελέσματα της ανάλυσης ο μηχανισμός μεταφοράς του εκπαιδευτικού επιπέδου από την μια γενιά στην επόμενη διαφέρει μεταξύ των εξεταζόμενων οικονομιών. Αυτές οι διαφορές συντελούν στη διεύρυνση των εκπαιδευτικών ανισοτήτων μεταξύ χωρών της ΕΕ-14 και στην υποβάθμιση της πρόσβασης σε ίσες ευκαιρίες για τους κατοίκους χωρών με χαμηλή κινητικότητα. Επίσης, λαμβάνοντας υπόψη τις συνθήκες που επικρατούσαν στο νοικοκυριό όταν το άτομο βρισκόταν στην παιδική ηλικία, βρέθηκε ότι η συσχέτιση της εκπαίδευσης μεταξύ γενεών είναι μικρότερη. Τέλος, η εφαρμογή ανάλυσης με βάση την χρονική περίοδο γέννησης του ατόμου κατά χώρα μας έδωσε τη δυνατότητα να προσδιορίζουμε την κατεύθυνση της τάσης που διαμορφώνεται ως προς την διαχρονική εξέλιξη της δια-γενεακής κινητικότητας στην ΕΕ-14. Τα αποτελέσματα με σαφήνεια υποδεικνύον την ύπαρξη σημαντικής κινητικότητας κατά την περίοδο 1950-2007 γεγονός το όποιο φαίνεται να ακολουθεί τη γενικότερη οικονομική ανάπτυξη που παρατηρήθηκε στις χώρες της ΕΕ-14 τη συγκεκριμένη περίοδο. / In the present work are investigated various aspects of intergenerational mobility of education in 14 countries of European Union. For this aim are used individual elements from the base of data European Social Survey (ESS) and particular accent are attributed in the level of education that has been completed so much by the individuals that constitute the unit of analysis what for their parents independent from whether the last ones are recorded or no in the used base of data. With base the results of analysis the mechanism of transport of educational level from a generation in next differs between the examined economies. These differences contribute in the enlargement of educational inequalities between countries of OJ-14 and in the devalorisation of access in equal occasions for the residents of countries with low mobility. Also, taking into consideration the conditions that prevailed in the household when the individual found itself in the children's age, he was found that the cross-correlation of education between generations is smaller. Finally, the application of analysis with base the time period of birth of individual at country us gave the possibility of determining the direction of tendency that is shaped as for the diachronic development of intergenerational mobility. The results with clarity show the existence of important mobility at period 1950-2007 make that appears to follow the more general economic growth that was observed in the countries of European Union the particular period.
8

Mobilité intergénérationnelle : Une estimation internationale de l'ampleur et des déterminants de la transmission intergénérationnelle des inégalités socio-économiques / Intergenerational mobility : An international estimation of extent and determinants of intergenerational transmission of socioeconomic inequalities

Lecavelier des Etangs-Levallois, Céline 26 June 2017 (has links)
Cette thèse s'intéresse à l'ampleur et aux déterminants de la mobilité socio-économique intergénérationnelle. Nous nous intéressons d'abord à la transmission des revenus de pères en fils en Allemagne, en traitant soigneusement la question des biais d'estimation. Cependant, cette approche ne tient pas compte de tous les facteurs du milieu socio-économique d'un individu affectant sa réussite future. Nous considérons ensuite des corrélations au sein de fratries, comme indicateur plus large de toutes les influences familiales, d'abord en France, pour l'éducation, la profession et les revenus. Nous réalisons également une étude comparative des corrélations de revenus entre frères en France et en Suède, afin d'évaluer l'impact sur l'estimation de l'absence d'information sur les revenus permanents et de l'utilisation alternative de mesures prédites. Enfin, nous abordons la question des mécanismes sous-jacents à la transmission des inégalités. Nous explorons ainsi la possibilité d'utiliser les événements de mai 1968 en France comme expérience naturelle pour identifier et mesurer le lien causal entre éducation des parents et des enfants. / This thesis investigates the extent and determinants of the intergenerational socioeconomic mobility. We first investigate the earnings transmission from fathers to sons in Germany, carefully addressing the question of biases in the estimation. However, this approach fails at taking account of all factors from the socioeconomic background of an individual affecting future success in life. We then consider sibling correlations as a broader indicator of all family influences, first in France, for education, profession and earnings. We also conduct a comparative study of the brother earnings correlation in France and Sweden to assess the impact on the estimation of the lack of information about permanent earnings and the use of predicted measures instead. Finally, we address the question of the mechanisms underlying the transmission of inequality. We thus explore the possibility to use the events of May 1968 in France as a natural experiment to identify and measure the causal link between parental and children's education.
9

Mobilidade intergeracional de educação no Brasil / Intergenerational schooling mobility in Brazil

Izabela Palma Paschoal 14 February 2008 (has links)
Estudos sobre mobilidade intergeracional de educação sugerem que países subdesenvolvidos apresentam menor mobilidade intergeracional que países desenvolvidos e especificamente para o Brasil, o grau de persistência estimado é ao redor de 0.7, podendo apresentar diferentes graus ao longo da distribuição de educação. Este estudo apresenta uma nova abordagem para a mensuração da mobilidade intergeracional utilizando Regressões Quantílicas. Especificamente, é proposta uma medida de distância entre os quantis condicionais para analisar a mobilidade intergeracional. Como resultado, é obtido um conjunto de matrizes que descrevem o padrão da mobilidade intergeracional em diferentes pontos da distribuição condicional de escolaridade. Utilizando dados para o Brasil, encontra-se que a mobilidade intergeracional tende a ser maior nas caudas da distribuição de escolaridade para filhos e filhas relativo à educação de pais e mães. Comparando filhos e filhas, os filhos tendem a ter menor mobilidade intergeracional que as mulheres relativo à educação de seus pais. Além do mais, a educação das mães tem maior efeito em magnitude do que a educação dos pais tanto para filhos quanto para as filhas. Também se encontrou que a educação dos filhos depende mais da educação do pai e a educação das filhas depende mais da educação das mães, indicando que os filhos tendem a ter educação similar à de seus pais e as filhas tendem a ter educação similar à de suas mães. / Studies on intergenerational educational mobility suggest that underdevelopment countries presents lower intergenerational mobility than developed countries and specifically for Brazil, the estimated degree of persistence is around 0.7 with possible different degrees on the overall distribution of education. This study presents a new approach to measuring intergenerational mobility using quantile regression. Specifically, it is proposed the use of a measure of distance between conditional quantiles to analyze intergenerational mobility. As a result, is obtained a set of matrices which describe the patterns of intergenerational mobility at different points of the conditional distribution of schooling. Using Brazilian Data (PNAD 1996) it is found that intergenerational mobility seems to be higher at the tails of the distribution of schooling for sons and daughters relative to father\'s and mother\'s education. Comparing each other, sons tend to have less mobility than daughters relative to father\'s education. Moreover, mother\'s education has stronger effects than father\'s on both sons and daughters education. It was also found that son\'s education depends more on father\'s education and daughter\'s education depends more on mother\'s education, indicating that sons tends to have education similar to their fathers and daughters tends to have education similar to their mothers.
10

The Effect of Paternal Job Loss on Intergenerational Mobility in Educational and Occupational Choice

Tuominen, Oona January 2023 (has links)
This thesis analyses the effect of father’s job displacement on his children’s occupational and educational choices. I use Finnish administrative data covering years 1989-2020 and identify downsizing as well as closing workplaces to find exogenous job losses. Despite identifying negative and persistent effects on displaced fathers, the found impact on their children’s career choices are limited and sensitive. I estimate that a paternal displacement decreases the probability of following father’s educational path by 0.5 percentage points. No effects on occupational mobility or educational applications are found. I establish pro-cyclical displacement costs for fathers that, however, are not found to translate into differences in the effects on the next generation.

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