Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
956006 Social Science Research 2012 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

It is commonly argued that social mobility rates are influenced by economic and political conditions. Nevertheless, research on this issue has tended to be hindered by two limitations that make it difficult to draw strong conclusions about contextual effects: (1) seldom have country-level and individual-level influences been tested simultaneously, and (2) only rarely have data more recent than the 1970s been employed. We improve on previous research by employing multilevel models fitted to relatively recent survey data collected from 20 modern societies by the International Social Survey Program (ISSP) and national-level characteristics derived from various official sources. Our findings demonstrate systematic cross-national variation in the association between the occupational status of respondents and their fathers. Consistent with the industrialization thesis, this variation is positively associated with per-capita GDP, suggesting that more affluent nations are characterized by more open and fluid stratification structures. Our results also suggest the importance of political regimes and migration for social mobility. In contrast, economic inequality appears to explain very little of the cross-national variation in mobility rates.

► We examine cross national variation in social mobility in 20 modern societies. ► Our findings demonstrate systematic cross-national variation in intragenerational mobility. ► This variation is largely associated with per-capita GDP. ► Political ideology and migration are also associated with this variation. ► Economic inequality, however, explain very little of this variation.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Social Psychology
Authors
, ,