Friday Seminar - "Intergenerational Mobility and Credit" - Gordon Phillips (Tuck School of Business, Dartmouth College)
Intergenerational Mobility and Credit
Abstract: To what extent – and through what channels – does parental credit access affect the future earnings of children? To answer this question, we combine the Decennial Census, credit reports, and administrative earnings records to create the first panel dataset linking parental credit access to the labor market outcomes of children in the U.S.We find that a 10% increase in parental unused revolving credit during their children’s adolescence (13 to 18 years old) is associated with 0.12% to 0.59% greater labor earnings of their children during early adulthood (25 to 30 years old), regardless of the educational attainment of the child or parent. We examine the mechanisms for this finding and show that increased parental credit access is associated with their children having higher rates of college graduation, fewer nonemployment spells, and a greater likelihood of working at higher paying firms. We then use our empirical elasticities to estimate a theory of intergenerational mobility with defaultable debt. The rise in credit access between the 1970s and 2000s increased the the intergenerational earnings elasticity and income variance of young adults. The expansion of credit has reduced intergenerational mobility and increased inequality as the largest increase in credit has occurred among high income households.
related events
Friday Seminar - "Green Tilts" - Lucian Taylor (Wharton University of Pennsylvania)
Room A720, SSE main building, entrance via Bertil Ohlins Gata 4 at 10:30
Friday Seminar - "Causal Narratives" - Constantin Charles (LSE)
Room A720, SSE main building, entrance via Bertil Ohlins Gata 4 at 10:30
Friday Seminar - Gerard Hoberg (University of Southern California)
Aula, SSE main building, entrance via Bertil Ohlins Gata 4 at 10:30