What the Mean Measures of Mobility Miss : Learning About Intergenerational Mobility From Conditional Variance

To understand the role of family background in intergenerational mobility, a large literature has focused on the conditional mean of children's economic outcomes given parent's economic status, while ignoring the information contained in...

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Main Authors: Ahsan, Md. Nazmul, Emran, M. Shahe, Hanchen, Jiang, Shilpi, Forhad
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099056206072213120/IDU0a33a06520651b040c20ab87017530886e214
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37517
id okr-10986-37517
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-375172022-06-14T13:38:36Z What the Mean Measures of Mobility Miss : Learning About Intergenerational Mobility From Conditional Variance Ahsan, Md. Nazmul Emran, M. Shahe Hanchen, Jiang Shilpi, Forhad CONDITIONAL VARIANCE FAMILY EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT PATERNAL EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT INTERGENERATIONAL EDUCATIONAL MOBILITY RISK ADJUSTED MOBILITY MEASURES CHILDREN'S ECONOMIC OUTCOMES FATHER'S EDUCATIONAL INFLUENCE EDUCATION GENDER GAP EDUCATION EQUITY PRIMARY SCHOOLING To understand the role of family background in intergenerational mobility, a large literature has focused on the conditional mean of children's economic outcomes given parent's economic status, while ignoring the information contained in conditional variance. This paper explores the effects of family background on the conditional variance of children's outcomes in the context of intergenerational educational mobility using data from three large developing countries (China, India, and Indonesia). The empirical analysis uses exceptionally rich data free of sample truncation because of the nonresident children at the time of the survey. Evidence from all three countries suggests a strong influence of father's education on the conditional variance of children's schooling. The analysis finds substantial heterogeneity across countries, gender, and geography (rural/urban). Cohort-based estimates suggest that the effects of father's education on the conditional variance have changed qualitatively; in some cases, a positive effect in the 1950s cohort turns into a substantial negative effect in the 1980s cohort. A methodology is developed to incorporate the effects of family background on the conditional variance along with the standard conditional mean effects. This paper derives risk-adjusted measures of relative and absolute mobility by accounting for an estimate of the risk premium for the conditional variance faced by a child. The estimates of risk-adjusted relative and absolute mobility for China, India, and Indonesia suggest that the existing evidence using the standard measures of mobility substantially underestimates the effects of family background on children's educational opportunities, and thus gives a false impression of high educational mobility. The magnitude of underestimation is especially large for the children born into the most disadvantaged households where fathers have no schooling, while it is negligible for the children of college educated fathers. The standard (but partial) measures may lead to an incorrect ranking of regions and groups in terms of relative mobility. Compared to the risk-adjusted measures, the standard measures are likely to underestimate the gender gap and rural-urban gap in educational opportunities. 2022-06-09T21:42:06Z 2022-06-09T21:42:06Z 2022-06 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099056206072213120/IDU0a33a06520651b040c20ab87017530886e214 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37517 English Policy Research Working Paper;10074 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research China India Indonesia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic CONDITIONAL VARIANCE
FAMILY EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
PATERNAL EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
INTERGENERATIONAL EDUCATIONAL MOBILITY
RISK ADJUSTED MOBILITY MEASURES
CHILDREN'S ECONOMIC OUTCOMES
FATHER'S EDUCATIONAL INFLUENCE
EDUCATION GENDER GAP
EDUCATION EQUITY
PRIMARY SCHOOLING
spellingShingle CONDITIONAL VARIANCE
FAMILY EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
PATERNAL EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
INTERGENERATIONAL EDUCATIONAL MOBILITY
RISK ADJUSTED MOBILITY MEASURES
CHILDREN'S ECONOMIC OUTCOMES
FATHER'S EDUCATIONAL INFLUENCE
EDUCATION GENDER GAP
EDUCATION EQUITY
PRIMARY SCHOOLING
Ahsan, Md. Nazmul
Emran, M. Shahe
Hanchen, Jiang
Shilpi, Forhad
What the Mean Measures of Mobility Miss : Learning About Intergenerational Mobility From Conditional Variance
geographic_facet China
India
Indonesia
relation Policy Research Working Paper;10074
description To understand the role of family background in intergenerational mobility, a large literature has focused on the conditional mean of children's economic outcomes given parent's economic status, while ignoring the information contained in conditional variance. This paper explores the effects of family background on the conditional variance of children's outcomes in the context of intergenerational educational mobility using data from three large developing countries (China, India, and Indonesia). The empirical analysis uses exceptionally rich data free of sample truncation because of the nonresident children at the time of the survey. Evidence from all three countries suggests a strong influence of father's education on the conditional variance of children's schooling. The analysis finds substantial heterogeneity across countries, gender, and geography (rural/urban). Cohort-based estimates suggest that the effects of father's education on the conditional variance have changed qualitatively; in some cases, a positive effect in the 1950s cohort turns into a substantial negative effect in the 1980s cohort. A methodology is developed to incorporate the effects of family background on the conditional variance along with the standard conditional mean effects. This paper derives risk-adjusted measures of relative and absolute mobility by accounting for an estimate of the risk premium for the conditional variance faced by a child. The estimates of risk-adjusted relative and absolute mobility for China, India, and Indonesia suggest that the existing evidence using the standard measures of mobility substantially underestimates the effects of family background on children's educational opportunities, and thus gives a false impression of high educational mobility. The magnitude of underestimation is especially large for the children born into the most disadvantaged households where fathers have no schooling, while it is negligible for the children of college educated fathers. The standard (but partial) measures may lead to an incorrect ranking of regions and groups in terms of relative mobility. Compared to the risk-adjusted measures, the standard measures are likely to underestimate the gender gap and rural-urban gap in educational opportunities.
format Working Paper
author Ahsan, Md. Nazmul
Emran, M. Shahe
Hanchen, Jiang
Shilpi, Forhad
author_facet Ahsan, Md. Nazmul
Emran, M. Shahe
Hanchen, Jiang
Shilpi, Forhad
author_sort Ahsan, Md. Nazmul
title What the Mean Measures of Mobility Miss : Learning About Intergenerational Mobility From Conditional Variance
title_short What the Mean Measures of Mobility Miss : Learning About Intergenerational Mobility From Conditional Variance
title_full What the Mean Measures of Mobility Miss : Learning About Intergenerational Mobility From Conditional Variance
title_fullStr What the Mean Measures of Mobility Miss : Learning About Intergenerational Mobility From Conditional Variance
title_full_unstemmed What the Mean Measures of Mobility Miss : Learning About Intergenerational Mobility From Conditional Variance
title_sort what the mean measures of mobility miss : learning about intergenerational mobility from conditional variance
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099056206072213120/IDU0a33a06520651b040c20ab87017530886e214
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37517
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