Fecha de publicación:
2023-07-27
Autores:
Celhay, Pablo A.
;
Gallegos, Sebastian
This paper presents new evidence on educational mobility across
three generations in six Latin American countries (LAC). Combining survey information with national census data we build a
data set with 50,000 triads of grandparents-parent-children born
between 1890 and 1990. We estimate a five mobility measures,
to show that (i) the empirical multi-generational persistence is
high in LAC; (ii) it is much larger than what Becker & Tomes
(1986) theoretical model predicts, with a bias that is twice as
large for LAC compared to developed countries; (iii) Clark’s
theory (2014) of high and sticky persistence provides a better approximation for describing mobility across multiple generations
in developing countries. We also uncover that while relative
measures suggest stagnant mobility across generations, there
are significant improvements according to non-linear measures
suggested by Asher, Novosad & Rafkin (2022). This result is
especially relevant for developing countries such as LAC, where
historical educational expansions have markedly benefited the
lower end of the schooling distribution.