Social mobility is the movement of individuals, families, households, or other categories of people within or between social strata in a society. It is a change in social status relative to one's current social location within a given society.
Definition
Social
mobility is defined as the movement of individuals, families,
households, or other categories of people within or between layers or
tiers in an open system of social stratification. Open stratification systems are those in which at least some value is given to achieved status characteristics in a society. The movement can be in a downward or upward direction. " Social mobility is any change in social position."
Typology
Mobility is most often quantitatively measured in terms of change in economic mobility such as changes in income or wealth.
Occupation is another measure used in researching mobility, which
usually involves both quantitative and qualitative analysis of data, but
other studies may concentrate on social class. Mobility may be intragenerational, within the same generation, or intergenerational, between different generations.
Intragenerational mobility is less frequent, representing "rags to
riches" cases in terms of upward mobility. Intergenerational upward
mobility is more common, where children or grandchildren are in economic
circumstances better than those of their parents or grandparents. In
the US, this type of mobility is described as one of the fundamental
features of the "American Dream" even though there is less such mobility than almost all other OECD countries.
Social status and social class
Social mobility is highly dependent on the overall structure of social statuses and occupations in a given society. The extent of differing social positions and the manner in which they fit together or overlap provides the overall social structure of such positions. Add to this the differing dimensions of status, such as Max Weber's delineation
of economic stature, prestige, and power and we see the potential for
complexity in a given social stratification system. Such dimensions
within a given society can be seen as independent variables
that can explain differences in social mobility at different times and
places in different stratification systems. In addition, the same
variables that contribute as intervening variables to the valuation of income or wealth and that also affect social status, social class, and social inequality do affect social mobility. These include sex or gender, race or ethnicity, and age.
Education provides one of the most promising chances of upward
social mobility into a better social class and attaining a higher social
status, regardless of current social standing in the overall structure
of society. However, the stratification of social classes and high
wealth inequality directly affects the educational opportunities people
are able to obtain and succeed in, and the chance for one's upward
social mobility. In other words, social class and a family's
socioeconomic status directly affect a child's chances for obtaining a
quality education and succeeding in life. By age five, there are
significant developmental differences between low, middle, and upper
class children's cognitive and noncognitive skills.
Among older children, evidence suggests that the gap between high- and low-income primary- and secondary-school students has increased by almost 40 percent over the past thirty years. These differences persist and widen into young adulthood and beyond. Just as the gap in K–12 test scores between high- and low-income students is growing, the difference in college graduation rates between the rich and the poor is also growing. Although the college graduation rate among the poorest households increased by about 4 percentage points between those born in the early 1960s and those born in the early 1980s, over this same period, the graduation rate increased by almost 20 percentage points for the wealthiest households.
Average family income, and social status, have both seen a decrease
for the bottom third of all children between 1975-2011. The 5th
percentile of children and their families have seen up to a 60% decrease
in average family income.
The wealth gap between the rich and the poor, the upper and lower
class, continues to increase as more middle-class people get poorer and
the lower-class get even poorer. As the socioeconomic inequality
continues to increase in the United States, being on either end of the
spectrum makes a child more likely to remain there, and never become
socially mobile.
A child born to parents with income in the lowest quintile is more than ten times more likely to end up in the lowest quintile than the highest as an adult (43 percent versus 4 percent). And, a child born to parents in the highest quintile is five times more likely to end up in the highest quintile than the lowest (40 percent versus 8 percent).
This is due to lower- and working-class parents (where neither is
educated above high school diploma level) spending less time on average
with their children in their earliest years of life and not being as
involved in their children's education and time out of school. This
parenting style, known as "accomplishment of natural growth" differs
from the style of middle-class and upper-class parents (with at least
one parent having higher education), known as "cultural cultivation".
More affluent social classes are able to spend more time with their
children at early ages, and children receive more exposure to
interactions and activities that lead to cognitive and non-cognitive
development: things like verbal communication, parent-child engagement,
and being read to daily. These children's parents are much more involved
in their academics and their free time; placing them in extracurricular
activities which develop not only additional non-cognitive skills but
also academic values, habits, and abilities to better communicate and
interact with authority figures. Lower class children often attend lower
quality schools, receive less attention from teachers, and ask for help
much less than their higher class peers.
The chances for social mobility are primarily determined by the family a
child is born into. Today, the gaps seen in both access to education
and educational success (graduating from a higher institution) is even
larger. Today, while college applicants from every socioeconomic class
are equally qualified, 75% of all entering freshmen classes at top-tier
American institutions belong to the uppermost socioeconomic quartile. A
family's class determines the amount of investment and involvement
parents have in their children's educational abilities and success from
their earliest years of life,
leaving low-income students with less chance for academic success and
social mobility due to the effects that the (common) parenting style of
the lower and working-class have on their outlook on and success in
education.
Class cultures and social networks
These
differing dimensions of social mobility can be classified in terms of
differing types of capital that contribute to changes in mobility. Cultural capital, a term first coined by French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu
distinguishes between the economic and cultural aspects of class.
Bourdieu described three types of capital that place a person in a
certain social category: economic capital; social capital; and cultural capital. Economic capital includes economic resources such as cash, credit, and other material assets.
Social capital includes resources one achieves based on group
membership, networks of influence, relationships and support from other
people. Cultural capital is any advantage a person has that gives them a
higher status in society, such as education,
skills, or any other form of knowledge. Usually, people with all three
types of capital have a high status in society. Bourdieu found that the
culture of the upper social class is oriented more toward formal
reasoning and abstract thought. The lower social class is geared more
towards matters of facts and the necessities of life. He also found that
the environment in which person develops has a large effect on the
cultural resources that a person will have.
The cultural resources a person has obtained can heavily
influence a child's educational success. It has been shown that students
raised under the concerted cultivation approach have "an emerging sense
of entitlement" which leads to asking teachers more questions and being
a more active student, causing teachers to favor students raised in
this manner.
This childrearing approach which creates positive interactions in the
classroom environment is in contrast with the natural growth approach to
childrearing. In this approach, which is more common amongst
working-class families, parents do not focus on developing the special
talents of their individual children, and they speak to their children
in directives. Due to this, it is more rare for a child raised in this
manner to question or challenge adults and conflict arises between
childrearing practices at home and school. Children raised in this
manner are less inclined to participate in the classroom setting and are
less likely to go out of their way to positively interact with teachers
and form relationships.
In the United States, links between minority underperformance in
schools have been made with a lacking in the cultural resources of
cultural capital, social capital, and economic capital, yet
inconsistencies persist even when these variables are accounted for.
"Once admitted to institutions of higher education, African Americans
and Latinos continued to underperform relative to their white and Asian
counterparts, earning lower grades, progressing at a slower rate, and
dropping out at higher rates. More disturbing was the fact that these
differentials persisted even after controlling for obvious factors such
as SAT scores and family socioeconomic status".
The theory of capital deficiency is among the most recognized
explanations for minority underperformance academically—that for
whatever reason they simply lack the resources to find academic success.
One of the largest factors for this, asides from the social, economic,
and cultural capital mentioned earlier, is human capital. This form of
capital, identified by social scientists only in recent years, has to do
with the education and life preparation of children. "Human capital
refers to the skills, abilities, and knowledge possessed by specific
individuals".
This allows college-educated parents who have large amounts of human
capital to invest in their children in certain ways to maximize future
success—from reading to them at night to possessing a better
understanding of the school system which causes them to be less
differential to teachers and school authorities.
Research also shows that well-educated black parents are less able to
transmit human capital to their children when compared to their white
counterparts, due to a legacy of racism and discrimination.
Patterns of mobility
While
it is generally accepted that some level of mobility in society is
desirable, there is no consensus agreement upon "how much" social
mobility is "good" or "bad" for a society. There is no international "benchmark" of social mobility, though one can compare measures of mobility across regions or countries or within a given area over time.
While cross-cultural studies comparing differing types of economies are
possible, comparing economies of similar type usually yields more
comparable data. Such comparisons typically look at intergenerational
mobility, examining the extent to which children born into different
families have different life chances and outcomes.
In a study for which the results were first published in 2009, Wilkinson and Pickett conduct an exhaustive analysis of social mobility in developed countries.
In addition to other correlations with negative social outcomes for
societies having high inequality, they found a relationship between high
social inequality and low social mobility. Of the eight countries
studied—Canada, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Germany, the UK and
the US, the US had both the highest economic inequality and lowest
economic mobility. In this and other studies, in fact, the USA has very
low mobility at the lowest rungs of the socioeconomic ladder, with
mobility increasing slightly as one goes up the ladder. At the top rung
of the ladder, however, mobility again decreases.
One study comparing social mobility between developed countries found that the four countries with the lowest "intergenerational income elasticity", i.e. the highest social mobility, were Denmark, Norway, Finland, and Canada with less than 20% of advantages of having a high income parent passed on to their children.
Studies have also found "a clear negative relationship" between income inequality and intergenerational mobility. Countries with low levels of inequality such as Denmark, Norway and Finland had some of the greatest mobility, while the two countries with the high level of inequality—Chile and Brazil—had some of the lowest mobility.
In Britain, much debate on social mobility has been generated by comparisons of the 1958 National Child Development Study (NCDS) and the 1970 Birth Cohort Study BCS70,
which compare intergenerational mobility in earnings between the 1958
and the 1970 UK cohorts, and claim that intergenerational mobility
decreased substantially in this 12-year period. These findings have been
controversial, partly due to conflicting findings on social class
mobility using the same datasets, and partly due to questions regarding the analytical sample and the treatment of missing data. UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown has famously said that trends in social mobility "are not as we would have liked".
Along with the aforementioned "Do Poor Children Become Poor Adults?" study, The Economist
also stated that "evidence from social scientists suggests that
American society is much 'stickier' than most Americans assume. Some
researchers claim that social mobility is actually declining." A German study corroborates these results. In spite of this low mobility Americans have had the highest belief in meritocracy among middle- and high-income countries.
A study of social mobility among the French corporate class has found
that class continues to influence who reaches the top in France, with
those from the upper-middle classes tending to dominate, despite a
longstanding emphasis on meritocracy.
Thomas Piketty
(2014) finds that wealth-income ratios, today, seem to be returning to
very high levels in low economic growth countries, similar to what he
calls the "classic patrimonial" wealth-based societies of the 19th
century wherein a minority lives off its wealth while the rest of the
population works for subsistence living.
Social mobility can also be influenced by differences that exist
within education. The contribution of education to social mobility often
gets neglected in social mobility research although it really has the
potential to transform the relationship between origins and
destinations.
Recognizing the disparities between strictly location and its
educational opportunities highlights how patterns of educational
mobility are influencing the capacity for individuals to experience
social mobility. There is some debate regarding how important
educational attainment is for social mobility. A substantial literature
argues that there is a direct effect of social origins (DESO) which
cannot be explained by educational attainment. However, other evidence
suggests that, using a sufficiently fine-grained measure of educational
attainment, taking on board such factors as university status and field
of study, education fully mediates the link between social origins and
access to top class jobs.
The patterns of educational mobility that exist between inner
city schools versus schools in the suburbs is transparent. Graduation
rates supply a rich context to these patterns. In the 2013–14 school
year, Detroit Public Schools observed a graduation rate of 71% whereas
Grosse Pointe High School (Detroit suburb) observed an average
graduation rate of 94%.
A similar phenomena was observed in Los Angeles, California as well as
in New York City. Los Angeles Senior High School (inner city) observed a
graduation rate of 58% and San Marino High School (suburb) observed a
graduation rate of 96%.
New York City Geographic District Number Two (inner city) observed a
graduation rate of 69% and Westchester School District (suburb) observed
a graduation rate of 85%.
These patterns were observed across the country when assessing the
differences between inner city graduation rates and suburban graduation
rates.
Influence of intelligence and education
Social status attainment
and therefore social mobility in adulthood are of interest to
psychologists, sociologists, political scientists, economists,
epidemiologists and many more. The reason behind the interest is because
it indicates access to material goods, educational opportunities,
healthy environments, and nonetheless the economic growth.
Researchers did a study that encompassed a wide range of data of
individuals in lifetime (in childhood and during mid-adulthood). Most of
the Scottish children which were born in 1921 participated in the
Scottish Mental Survey 1932, which was conducted under the auspices of
the Scottish Council for Research in Education (SCRE)
and obtained the data of psychometric intelligence of Scottish pupils.
The number of children who took the mental ability test (based on the
Moray House tests) was 87,498. They were between age 10 and 11. The
tests covered general, spatial and numerical reasoning.
At mid-life period, a subset of the subjects participated in one
of the studies, which were large health studies of adults and were
carried out in Scotland in the 1960s and 1970s.
The particular study they took part in was the collaborative study of
6022 men and 1006 women, conducted between 1970 and 1973 in Scotland.
Participants completed a questionnaire (participant's address, father's
occupation, the participant's own first regular occupation, the age of
finishing full-time education, number of siblings, and if the
participant was a regular car driver) and attended a physical
examination (measurement of height). Social class was coded according to
the Registrar General's Classification for the participant's occupation
at the time of screening, his first occupation and his father's
occupation. Researchers separated into six social classes were used.
A correlation and structural equation model analysis was conducted.
In the structural equation models, social status in the 1970s was the
main outcome variable. The main contributors to education (and first
social class) were father's social class and IQ at age 11, which was
also found in a Scandinavian study. This effect was direct and also mediated via education and the participant's first job.
Participants at midlife did not necessarily end up in the same social class as their fathers.
There was social mobility in the sample: 45% of men were upwardly
mobile, 14% were downward mobile and 41% were socially stable. IQ at age
11 had a graded relationship with participant's social class. The same
effect was seen for father's occupation. Men at midlife social class I
and II (the highest, more professional) also had the highest IQ at age
11. Height at midlife, years of education and childhood IQ were
significantly positively related to upward social mobility, while number
of siblings had no significant effect. For each standard deviation
increase in IQ score at the age 11, the chances of upward social
mobility increases by 69% (with a 95% confidence). After controlling the
effect of independent variables,
only IQ at age 11 was significantly inversely related to downward
movement in social mobility. More years of education increase the chance
that a father's son will surpass his social class, whereas low IQ makes
a father's son prone to falling behind his father's social class.
Higher IQ at age 11 was also significantly related to higher social
class at midlife, higher likelihood car driving at midlife, higher first
social class, higher father's social class, fewer siblings, higher age
of education, being taller and living in a less deprived neighbourhood
at midlife. IQ was significantly more strongly related to the social class in midlife than the social class of the first job.
Finally, height, education and IQ at age 11 were predictors of
upward social mobility and only IQ at age 11 and height were significant
predictors of downward social mobility. Number of siblings was not significant in neither of the models.
Another research
looked into the pivotal role of education in association between
ability and social class attainment through three generations (fathers,
participants and offspring) using the SMS1932 (Lothian Birth Cohort 1921)
educational data, childhood ability and late life intellectual function
data. It was proposed that social class of origin acts as a ballast
restraining otherwise meritocratic social class movement, and that
education is the primary means through which social class movement is
both restrained and facilitated—therefore acting in a pivotal role.
It was found that social class of origin predicts educational attainment in both the participant's and offspring generations.
Father's social class and participant's social class held the same
importance in predicting offspring educational attainment—effect across
two generations. Educational attainment mediated the association of
social class attainments across generations (father's and participants
social class, participant's and offspring's social class). There was no
direct link social classes across generations, but in each generation
educational attainment was a predictor of social class, which is
consistent with other studies.
Also, participant's childhood ability moderately predicted their
educational and social class attainment (.31 and .38). Participant's
educational attainment was strongly linked with the odds of moving
downward or upward on the social class ladder. For each SD increase in
education, the odds of moving upward on the social class spectrum were
2.58 times greater (the downward ones were .26 times greater).
Offspring's educational attainment was also strongly linked with the
odds of moving upward or downward on the social class ladder. For each
SD increase in education, the odds of moving upward were 3.54 times
greater (the downward ones were .40 times greater). In conclusion,
education is very important, because it is the fundamental mechanism
functioning both to hold individuals in their social class of origin and
to make it possible for their movement upward or downward on the social
class ladder.
In the Cohort 1936 it was found that regarding whole generations (not individuals)
the social mobility between father's and participant's generation is:
50.7% of the participant generation have moved upward in relation to
their fathers, 22.1% had moved downwards, and 27.2% had remained stable
in their social class. There was a lack of social mobility in the
offspring generation as a whole. However, there was definitely
individual offspring movement on the social class ladder: 31.4% had
higher social class attainment than their participant parents
(grandparents), 33.7% moved downward, and 33.9% stayed stable.
Participant's childhood mental ability was linked to social class in all
three generations. A very important pattern has also been confirmed:
average years of education increased with social class and IQ.
There were some great contributors to social class attainment and
social class mobility in the twentieth century: Both social class
attainment and social mobility are influenced by pre-existing levels of
mental ability, which was in consistence with other studies.
So, the role of individual level mental ability in pursuit of
educational attainment—professional positions require specific
educational credentials. Furthermore, educational attainment contributes
to social class attainment through the contribution of mental ability
to educational attainment. Even further, mental ability can contribute
to social class attainment independent of actual educational attainment,
as in when the educational attainment is prevented, individuals with
higher mental ability manage to make use of the mental ability to work
their way up on the social ladder. This study made clear that
intergenerational transmission of educational attainment is one of the
key ways in which social class was maintained within family, and there
was also evidence that education attainment was increasing over time.
Finally, the results suggest that social mobility (moving upward and
downward) has increased in recent years in Britain. Which according to
one researcher is important because an overall mobility of about 22% is
needed to keep the distribution of intelligence relatively constant
from one generation to the other within each occupational category.
Researchers looked into the effects elitist and non-elitist
education systems have on social mobility. Education policies are often
critiqued based on their impact on a single generation, but it is
important to look at education policies and the effects they have on
social mobility. In the research, elitist schools are defined as schools
that focus on providing its best students with the tools to succeed,
whereas an egalitarian school is one that predicates itself on giving
equal opportunity to all its students to achieve academic success.
When private education supplements were not considered, it was
found that the greatest amount of social mobility was derived from a
system with the least elitist public education system. It was also
discovered that the system with the most elitist policies produced the
greatest amount of utilitarian welfare. Logically, social mobility
decreases with more elitist education systems and utilitarian welfare
decreases with less elitist public education policies.
When private education supplements are introduced, it becomes
clear that some elitist policies promote some social mobility and that
an egalitarian system is the most successful at creating the maximum
amount of welfare. These discoveries were justified from the reasoning
that elitist education systems discourage skilled workers from
supplementing their children's educations with private expenditures.
The authors of the report showed that they can challenge
conventional beliefs that elitist and regressive educational policy is
the ideal system. This is explained as the researchers found that
education has multiple benefits. It brings more productivity and has a
value, which was a new thought for education. This shows that the
arguments for the regressive model should not be without qualifications.
Furthermore, in the elitist system, the effect of earnings distribution
on growth is negatively impacted due to the polarizing social class
structure with individuals at the top with all the capital and
individuals at the bottom with nothing.
Education is very important in determining the outcome of one's
future. It is almost impossible to achieve upward mobility without
education. Education is frequently seen as a strong driver of social
mobility.
The quality of one's education varies depending on the social class
that they are in. The higher the family income the better opportunities
one is given to get a good education. The inequality in education makes
it harder for low-income families to achieve social mobility. Research
has indicated that inequality is connected to the deficiency of social
mobility. In a period of growing inequality and low social mobility,
fixing the quality of and access to education has the possibility to
increase equality of opportunity for all Americans.
"One significant consequence of growing income inequality is
that, by historical standards, high-income households are spending much
more on their children's education than low-income households."
With the lack of total income, low-income families can't afford to
spend money on their children's education. Research has shown that over
the past few years, families with high income has increased their
spending on their children's education. High income families were paying
$3,500 per year and now it has increased up to nearly $9,000, which is
seven times more than what low income families pay for their kids'
education.
The increase in money spent on education has caused an increase in
college graduation rates for the families with high income. The increase
in graduation rates is causing an even bigger gap between high income
children and low-income children. Given the significance of a college
degree in today's labor market, rising differences in college completion
signify rising differences in outcomes in the future.
Family income is one of the most important factors in determining
the mental ability (intelligence) of their children. With such bad
education that urban schools are offering, parents of high income are
moving out of these areas to give their children a better opportunity to
succeed. As urban school systems worsen, high income families move to
rich suburbs because that is where they feel better education is; if
they do stay in the city, they put their children to private schools.
Low income families do not have a choice but to settle for the bad
education because they cannot afford to relocate to rich suburbs. The
more money and time parents invest in their child plays a huge role in
determining their success in school. Research has shown that higher
mobility levels are perceived for locations where there are better
schools.