Like Father Like Son? Intergenerational Immobility in England, 1851-1911
This is the replication package for "Like Father Like Son? Intergenerational Immobility in England, 1851-1911" in the Journal of Economic History.
Abstract of the paper: This paper uses a new linked sample constructed from full-count census data of 1851-1911 to revise estimates of intergenerational occupational mobility in England. I find that conventional estimates of intergenerational elasticities are attenuated by classical measurement error and severely underestimate the extent of father-son association in socioeconomic status. Instrumenting one measure of the father’s outcome with a second measure of the father’s outcome raises the intergenerational elasticities (β) of occupational status from 0.4 to 0.6-0.7. Victorian England was therefore a society of limited social mobility. The long-run evolution and international comparisons of social mobility in England are discussed.
| Item Type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| Publisher | OpenICPSR |
| DOI | 10.3886/e195292 |
| Date made available | 24 November 2023 |
| Keywords | economic history, intergenerational mobility |
| Temporal coverage |
From To 1851 1911 |
| Geographic coverage | England |
| Resource language | Other |
| Departments | LSE |
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