TY - UNPB
T1 - Intergenerational Educational Persistence in Europe
AU - Schneebaum, Alyssa
AU - Rumplmaier, Bernhard
AU - Altzinger, Wilfried
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Primarily using data from the 2010 European Social Survey, we analyze intergenerational educational persistence in 20 European countries, studying cross-country and cross-cluster differences in intergenerational mobility; the role of gender in determining educational persistence across generations; and changes in the degree of intergenerational persistence over time. We find that persistence is highest in the Southern and Eastern European countries, and lowest in the Nordic countries. While intergenerational persistence in the Nordic and Southern countries has declined over time, it has remained relatively steady in the rest of Europe. Further, we find evidence of differences in intergenerational persistence by gender, with mothers education being a stronger determinant of daughters (instead of sons) education and fathers education a stronger determinant of the education of their sons. Finally we see that for most clusters differences over time are largely driven by increasing mobility for younger women.
AB - Primarily using data from the 2010 European Social Survey, we analyze intergenerational educational persistence in 20 European countries, studying cross-country and cross-cluster differences in intergenerational mobility; the role of gender in determining educational persistence across generations; and changes in the degree of intergenerational persistence over time. We find that persistence is highest in the Southern and Eastern European countries, and lowest in the Nordic countries. While intergenerational persistence in the Nordic and Southern countries has declined over time, it has remained relatively steady in the rest of Europe. Further, we find evidence of differences in intergenerational persistence by gender, with mothers education being a stronger determinant of daughters (instead of sons) education and fathers education a stronger determinant of the education of their sons. Finally we see that for most clusters differences over time are largely driven by increasing mobility for younger women.
UR - http://www.wu.ac.at/economics/forschung/wp
U2 - 10.57938/17137ff0-e4a9-40bb-9726-e671e4af1bd5
DO - 10.57938/17137ff0-e4a9-40bb-9726-e671e4af1bd5
M3 - WU Working Paper
T3 - Department of Economics Working Paper Series
BT - Intergenerational Educational Persistence in Europe
ER -