Sociological Science (Apr 2017)

More than Money: Social Class, Income, and the Intergenerational Persistence of Advantage

  • Carina Mood

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15195/v4.a12
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 12
pp. 263 – 287

Abstract

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I provide a uniquely comprehensive empirical integration of the sociological and economic approaches to the intergenerational transmission of advantage. I analyze the independent and interactive associations that parental income and social class share with children’s later earnings, using large-scale Swedish register data with matched parent–child records that allow exact and reliable measurement of occupations and incomes. I show that parental class matters at a given income and income matters within a given social class, and the net associations are substantial. Because measurement error is minimal, this result strongly suggests that income and class capture partly different underlying advantages and transmission mechanisms. If including only one of these measures, rather than both, we underestimate intergenerational persistence by around a quarter. The nonlinearity of the income–earnings association is found to be largely a compositional effect capturing the main effect of class.

Keywords