美国家庭收入流动趋势,1967-2004

K. Bradbury, Jane Katz
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引用次数: 10

摘要

美国的承诺很大程度上是建立在经济流动性的基础上的,即人们不受起点的限制或限制,而是可以根据自己的努力和成就在经济阶梯上取得进步。家庭收入流动性——单个家庭实际收入随时间的变化——是衡量一个家庭最终的经济福利与其起点的关联程度的一个指标。在美国,自20世纪70年代中期以来,家庭收入不平等逐年加剧,这引发了人们的疑问:长期收入分配是否也越来越不平等?随着时间的推移,流动性的变化可以抵消或放大不平等的横向增长,这决定了长期收入不平等的平行上升程度。;利用收入动态小组研究的数据和从文献中提取的一些流动性概念和措施,我们研究了1967年至2004年期间美国工作年龄家庭的整体和种族流动性水平和趋势。通过大多数衡量标准,我们发现,较近时期(20世纪90年代至21世纪初)的流动性低于较早时期(20世纪70年代)。最值得注意的是,从底层开始的家庭的流动性随着时间的推移而恶化。然而,近年来,流动性下降的趋势或多或少明显(甚至不存在),这取决于衡量标准,尽管收集家庭收入面板数据的频率有所下降,因此很难得出确切的结论。从总体分布或绝对值来看,黑人家庭在所有时期的流动性都明显低于白人家庭;他们的流动性在20世纪70年代到90年代之间有所下降,但没有超过白人家庭,尽管他们在相对收入方面有所下降。;综合来看,这些证据表明,在1967年至2004年的时间跨度内,低收入家庭向上移动的可能性下降,家庭晚年的收入越来越依赖于他们的起点,家庭一生收入的分配变得不平等。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Trends in U.S. Family Income Mobility, 1967-2004
Much of America’s promise is predicated on the existence of economic mobility—the idea that people are not limited or defined by where they start, but can move up the economic ladder based on their efforts and accomplishments. Family income mobility—changes in individual families’ real incomes over time—is one indicator of the degree to which the eventual economic wellbeing of any family is tethered to its starting point. In the United States, family income inequality has risen from year to year since the mid-1970s, raising questions about whether long-term income is also increasingly unequally distributed; changes over time in mobility, which can offset or amplify the cross-sectional increase in inequality, determine the degree to which the inequality of longer-term income has risen in parallel. ; Using data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and a number of mobility concepts and measures drawn from the literature, we examine mobility levels and trends for U.S. working-age families, overall and by race, during the time span 1967–2004. By most measures, we find that mobility is lower in more recent periods (the 1990s into the early 2000s) than in earlier periods (the 1970s). Most notably, mobility of families starting near the bottom has worsened over time. However, in recent years, the down-trend in mobility is more or less pronounced (or even non-existent) depending on the measure, although a decrease in the frequency with which panel data on family incomes are gathered makes it difficult to draw firm conclusions. Measured relative to the overall distribution or in absolute terms, black families exhibit substantially less mobility than whites in all periods; their mobility decreased between the 1970s and the 1990s, but no more than that of white families, although they lost ground in terms of relative income. ; Taken together, this evidence suggests that over the 1967-to-2004 time span, a low-income family’s probability of moving up decreased, families’ later year incomes increasingly depended on their starting place, and the distribution of families’ lifetime incomes became less equal.
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