Gender stratification, racial disparities, and student debt trajectories in the United States

IF 2.7 1区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY Research in Social Stratification and Mobility Pub Date : 2024-05-03 DOI:10.1016/j.rssm.2024.100929
Fenaba R. Addo , Xing Zhang
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Abstract

In the United States, post-secondary educational outcomes are stratified by gender, with women attending college and completing their degrees at higher rates. At the same time, student loan debt has become an ubiquitous part of the college process for many pursuing higher education, increasing the financial risks associated with the pursuit of higher education while lessening the financial rewards. Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 (NLSY97) of young adults who ever attended a post-secondary institution and growth curve models, we estimate gender disparities in student debt trajectories throughout young adulthood. Building on work on the racialization of the student debt landscape (Houle & Addo 2022), we also investigate the intersection of race and gender, and include both within race gender analyses and within gender racial analyses. Gender differences in student debt at baseline, or at the age of first college enrollment, are large and the gender debt gap grows at 1.2 % per year. We document evidence of a curvilinear relationship in student debt in young adulthood, with student debt accumulating at the beginning of the college enrollment period and the rate of increase declining over time as adults age. Women, who start the period with larger amounts of student debt, experience faster growth in their debt accumulation followed by lower declines relative to young adult men. These patterns are magnified among Black young adults, with the gender debt disparity between Black women and Black men growing 3.4 % annually. We find no association between gender and student debt trajectories among Latinx and White young adults. Within-gender models highlight the prevalence of the student debt crisis among Black women and Black men. Additional analyses suggest gender differences in debt trajectories are a function of postsecondary and young adult socioeconomic characteristics, reflecting broader societal inequalities that stem from structural elements related to post-secondary schooling and economic status. These patterns may inhibit wealth-building among women and Black adults in the United States.

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美国的性别分层、种族差异和学生债务轨迹
在美国,中学后教育的结果是按性别分层的,女性上大学和完成学业的比例较高。与此同时,学生贷款债务已成为许多人接受高等教育过程中无处不在的一部分,增加了接受高等教育的财务风险,同时减少了财务回报。利用 1997 年全国青年纵向调查(NLSY97)中关于曾就读于高等教育机构的年轻成人的数据和增长曲线模型,我们估算了整个青年期学生债务轨迹的性别差异。在学生债务种族化研究(Houle & Addo 2022)的基础上,我们还调查了种族和性别的交集,并包括种族内性别分析和性别内种族分析。学生债务的性别差异在基线或首次大学入学年龄时很大,性别债务差距每年增长 1.2%。我们记录的证据表明,在青年时期,学生债务呈曲线关系,学生债务在大学入学初期不断积累,随着年龄的增长,增加率逐渐下降。女性在入学之初的学生债务数额较大,与男性相比,她们的债务积累增长较快,随后的下降幅度较小。这些模式在黑人青壮年中更为明显,黑人女性和黑人男性之间的性别债务差距每年增长 3.4%。我们发现拉美裔和白人年轻人的性别与学生债务轨迹之间没有关联。性别内模型凸显了学生债务危机在黑人女性和黑人男性中的普遍性。其他分析表明,债务轨迹中的性别差异是中学后和青年社会经济特征的函数,反映了更广泛的社会不平等,这些不平等源于与中学后教育和经济地位相关的结构性因素。这些模式可能会抑制美国妇女和黑人成年人的财富积累。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
6.00%
发文量
46
期刊介绍: The study of social inequality is and has been one of the central preoccupations of social scientists. Research in Social Stratification and Mobility is dedicated to publishing the highest, most innovative research on issues of social inequality from a broad diversity of theoretical and methodological perspectives. The journal is also dedicated to cutting edge summaries of prior research and fruitful exchanges that will stimulate future research on issues of social inequality. The study of social inequality is and has been one of the central preoccupations of social scientists.
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