From earnings to occupations: Understanding intergenerational mobility in Turkey
Yükleniyor...
Dosyalar
Tarih
2024
Yazarlar
Dergi Başlığı
Dergi ISSN
Cilt Başlığı
Yayıncı
Shaheed Benazir Bhutto Women University
Erişim Hakkı
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Özet
The studies analyzing intergenerational economic mobility have been rather scarce for developing countries due to unavailability of longitudinal datasets. This study uses data from Survey of Income and Living Condition (SILC) from 2006-2021, obtained from Turkish Statistical Institute to analyze the intergenerational income and occupational mobility in Turkey. Besides measuring the dynamics of income and occupational mobility across generations, we also analyze how does the association of children socioeconomic outcome with their family background vary at different career levels of children. Our findings reveal that the association with parents income is much higher for daughters as compared to sons suggesting daughters outcomes are more explained by their family socioeconomic status. Regarding the association of children’ outcome with family status at different career stage, the relationship is stronger when children are at the mid-career level. The Bayesian methodology and Pseudo-panel fixed effect model has been employed to estimate intergenerational income elasticity and for the rest of the analysis, Bayesian methodology has been utilized. Our finding also reveals higher intergenerational occupational persistence among children in higher income families while children from disadvantaged families have higher probability of switching career upon receiving good education and income perspective.
Açıklama
Anahtar Kelimeler
Intergenerational Income/Occupation Mobility, Inequalities, Household Income, Bayesian Modeling
Kaynak
FWU Journal of Social Sciences
WoS Q Değeri
Scopus Q Değeri
Q2
Cilt
18
Sayı
3
Künye
Iftikhar, S. ve Vergil, H. (2024). From earnings to occupations: Understanding intergenerational mobility in Turkey. FWU Journal of Social Sciences, 18(3), 87-98. https://www.doi.org/10.51709/19951272/Fall2024/8