We compute rates of absolute upward income mobility for the 1960-1987 birth cohorts in eight countries in North America and Europe. Rates and trends in absolute mobility varied dramatically across countries during this period: the US and Canada saw upward mobility rates near 50% for recent cohorts, while countries like Norway and Finland saw sustained rates above 70%. Decomposition analysis suggests that differences in the marginal income distributions, especially the amount of cross-cohort income inequality, were the primary driver of differing mobility rates across countries. We also demonstrate that absolute mobility rates can be accurately estimated without linked parent-child data.
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- TitelTrends in absolute income mobility in North America and Europe / Robert Manduca (University of Michigan), Maximilian Hell (Stanford University), Adrian Adermon (Institute for Evaluation of Labor Market and Education Policy), Jo Blanden (University of Surrey and IZA), Espen Bratberg (University of Bergen), Anne C. Gielen (Erasmus School of Economics and IZA), Hans Van Kippersluis (Erasmus School of Economics), Keun Bok Lee (University of California), Stephen Machin (London School of Economics and IZA), Martin D. Munk (The Free University, Copenhagen), Martin Nybom (Institute for Evaluation of Labor Market and Education Policy), Yuri Ostrovsky (Statistics Canada), Sumaiya Rahman (Frontier Economics), Outi Sirniö (University of Turku) ; IZA Institute of Labor Economics
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