The data compares generational family incomes to determine if children are "doing better" than their parents. One chart (click below for bigger, .pdf link) shows that while the difference between the top quintile and the bottom quintile median incomes is increasing, all income levels do increase. Calling a difference a gap, as they do in the report, is a good way to generate a negative connotation for the data.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh-8dFZHetp7V3BNMn_Dmw0-UucbpCitTZMMbzEv3jQYWJ1MLWKxmYUkqJEjjavghkoW-55HQacvbMlq9nMWotQibLNjmKPSGB0q5KSOhg5R8pBeHpkJThxS_7hBbCU1tSkDlOv/s400/Economic+mobility+project+figure+1.jpg)
One interesting chart (click for larger, .pdf link) shows the fraction of each generation that stays in the same quintile or moves to different quintiles.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg-Yf2RFgCL9tZLBPqGyqt_xYdvP3nr86JP_k3VnXAp975xoPZiwWVipxGJD9lnq3Oi_nXP3hdUpZdpqA50VzBNg9UzNuEW0-YKdD3N7yoNfwiy9mbSwg1y22ZTNwv5TgJuHeig/s400/economic+mobility+project+figure+4.jpg)
The report includes a table (click for larger, .pdf link) breaking out each group into rising, falling and staying the same groups with respect to income and quintile. It is only in this chart that I see the most concerning data.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh3HqS0bQPJO6T3XVse8wpdr4Mn6m_tuIOoVaehGUs875LDNcyqPCAXx3OYhD-y8gEO7dW_3ijnlGhr49RK9y-RQv8rEEwMHq_-89tFHonYqBKgTJ-l5Q7nTvgZRTPrK95zLgeO/s400/economic+mobility+project+table+1.jpg)
The rest of the key findings (.pdf link) of the report focus on things that we have been aware of for some time. Many of the families in poverty are families with a single mother, and non-white. Thus the programs in place to offer these groups opportunities to improve their economic situation should continue or be improved. I strongly disagree that economic equality is a target to be striven for. The report seems to think that economic advantage or disparity is a bad thing in and of itself. As Americans we often don't realize that for most people things are better now than before, we are miserable when we someone else with more, no matter how much we have. I daresay we would be miserable if everyone had the same as well, no matter how well off.
In spite of the negative view offered by Kemp, I tentatively agree with some of his conclusions. We should try to reduce poverty as much as possible. We should find ways to allow increased opportunity for those in poverty to break out of it and move up the income scale and improve quality of life. I disagree with the negative tone of the article because the very study that it uses seems to also support the idea that the United States is one country in the world where these opportunities exits and that incomes (and by extension the quality of life) of each generation do continue to improve.
No comments:
Post a Comment