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Event

Pat Bayer (Duke), "The Long Road to Equality: Racial Capital and Generational Convergence"

Friday, October 7, 2022 15:30to17:00
Leacock Building Room 429, 855 rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montreal, QC, H3A 2T7, CA

"The Long Road to Equality: Racial Capital and Generational Convergence"

(Duke)
with Kerwin Kofi Charles and JoonYup Park

October 7, 2022, 3:30 to 5:00 PM
Leacock 429

Host: Nicolas Gendron-Carrier
Field: Applied

Abstract:
We develop a theoretical framework in which segregation, discrimination, and other racialized processes make intergenerational mobility a function of the capital available to one’s broader racial/ethnic group. We show that racial capital systematically slows the speed of generational convergence for historically unequal groups and that, for any particular racial group, its impact is directly related to the social salience of race in society. We estimate empirical models of intergenerational mobility using data from Opportunity Insights and the NLSY for Asian, Black, Hispanic, and white children born around 1980. Racial capital at the neighborhood and, especially, the metropolitan area levels has a substantial role in explaining Black-white education, income, and employment gaps. It matters about half as much for Hispanic-white differences and very little for Asian-white differences. The inclusion of racial capital in the model sharply closes, and in many cases reverses, the Black-white and Hispanic-white intergenerational mobility gaps documented in Chetty et al. (2020). These results imply that (i) observed racial outcome gaps are largely a function of historical inequities in available capital (more broadly construed here to include neighborhood/metro racial capital in addition to one’s own parents) and (ii) racial capital – and, more fundamentally, the continued social salience of race – plays a crucial role in explaining the historically slow speed of convergence to Black-white equality in the United States.

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