The Intergenerational Transmission of Lifetime Earnings: Evidence from Brazil
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Christopher E Dunn
Abstract
This paper uses unique household survey data from Brazil and recently developed econometric techniques to estimate the transmission of lifetime earnings in Brazil and to examine effects of earnings measurement on estimates of intergenerational mobility. The level of intergenerational earnings transmission in Brazil is estimated to be among the highest observed for any country. Observations of earnings across the life-cycles of fathers and sons are used to form estimates of the transmission of lifetime earnings and to study life-cycle measurement effects on earnings transmission estimates. The use of earnings of relatively young sons, common in previous studies, is found to underestimate the true level of transmission of lifetime earnings. This paper provides two methods to obtain improved measures of lifetime earnings transmission. This paper also finds that education may be the most significant pathway by which earnings are transmitted intergenerationally.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Advances Article
- Nature and Nurture in the Intergenerational Transmission of Socioeconomic Status: Evidence from Swedish Children and Their Biological and Rearing Parents
- Marital Sorting, Household Labor Supply, and Intergenerational Earnings Mobility across Countries
- The Inheritance of Educational Inequality: International Comparisons and Fifty-Year Trends
- Contributions Article
- Comparable Estimates of Intergenerational Income Mobility in Italy
- The Intergenerational Transmission of Lifetime Earnings: Evidence from Brazil
- Intergenerational Earnings Mobility in Italy
- Intergenerational Mobility in Australia
- Children of the Post-Communist Transition: Age at the Time of the Parents' Job Loss and Dropping Out of Secondary School
- Intergenerational Earnings Mobility: Changes across Cohorts in Britain
- Topics Article
- Intergenerational Income Mobility in Singapore