受教育程度高,流动性差?智利和秘鲁收入和教育流动的不同趋势

A. Gaentzsch, Gabriela Zapata Román
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摘要

我们分析了20世纪50年代初至1990年智利和秘鲁出生队列的收入和教育的代际持续性。这两个国家在这一时期都经历了教育的结构性扩张,近几十年来收入不平等也在减少。我们从重复的横截面中推算出未观察到的父母收入,并估计1977-1990年出生队列的户主在秘鲁的持续时间为0.63至0.67,在智利为0.66至0.76。教育流动的分析涵盖1953年至1990年出生队列的户主,并依赖于回顾性资料。我们观察到年轻一代的绝对流动性有所增加,我们认为这与教育的结构性扩张有关,这为上层创造了空间。相对而言,流动模式仍然更加稳定,父母的教育程度仍然是个人教育成就的有力预测指标。在这两个国家,这种关系都是非线性的:受教育程度极低和较高的群体的持久性很强,而父母受教育程度一般的个人流动性更强。秘鲁的向上流动性强于智利:在一代人的时间里,从没有接受过正规教育到接受过高等教育的机会为46%,这是秘鲁的平均水平,而智利为20%。在秘鲁,几代人都能保持在顶层的几率也略高,是平均水平的3倍,而智利是2.76倍。
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More Educated, Less Mobile? Diverging Trends in Income and Education Mobility in Chile and Peru
We analyse intergenerational persistence in income and education in Chile and Peru for birth cohorts from the early 1950s to 1990. Both countries have seen a structural expansion of education over this period and decreasing income inequality in recent decades. We impute non-observed parental income from repeated cross-sections and estimate persistence in the range of 0.63 to 0.67 in Peru and 0.66 to 0.76 in Chile for household heads of the birth cohorts 1977–1990. The analysis of educational mobility covers household heads of birth cohorts from 1953 to 1990 and relies on retrospective information. We observe an increase in absolute mobility for younger generations, which we relate to the structural expansion of education that created room at the top. In relative terms, mobility patterns remain more stable, and parental education is still a strong predictor for own educational achievement. The relationship is non-linear in both countries: persistence among very low and highly educated groups is strong, while individuals with parents of average education levels are more mobile. Upward mobility is stronger in Peru than in Chile: the chances to move from no formal education to higher education across one generation are 46 per cent, the average in Peru, compared to 20 per cent in Chile. The chances of persisting in the top across generations are also slightly higher in Peru with a factor of 3 times the average compared to 2.76 in Chile.
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