Class Mobility in the Era of Rising Inequality: A Synthetic Dynasty Analysis
This paper studies contemporary trends in class mobility using a new approach based on the “synthetic dynasties” represented in Markov chains. This approach yields several novel measures of movement and memory, which respectively capture how class positions differ from one generation to the next and how the influence of class origins dissipates across generations. Applying these methods to data from the U.S., we find that overall levels of movement and memory have remained largely stable across cohorts born between 1945 and 1990. This stability, however, masks offsetting class-specific trends. Among those from the upper and lower classes, movement has declined and memory has increased. In contrast, among the middle classes, movement has risen and memory has weakened.
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Copy CitationGeoffrey Wodtke, Weiqi Wang, Kristina Butaeva, and Steven N. Durlauf, "Class Mobility in the Era of Rising Inequality: A Synthetic Dynasty Analysis," NBER Working Paper 34800 (2026), https://doi.org/10.3386/w34800.Download Citation