Good morning. A large new study offers clues about how lower-income children can rise up the economic ladder. |
| Mari Bowie, a criminal-defense lawyer, is the first person in her family with a postgraduate degree.Marissa Leshnov for The New York Times |
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Social scientists have made it a priority in recent years to understand upward mobility. They have used tax records and other data to study which factors increase the chances that children who grow up in poverty will be able to escape it as adults. |
Education, spanning pre-K through college, seems to play a big role, the research suggests. Money itself is also important: Longer, deeper bouts of poverty can affect children for decades. Other factors — like avoiding eviction, having access to good medical care and growing up in a household with two parents — may also make upward mobility more likely. |
"Growing up in a community connected across class lines improves kids' outcome and gives them a better shot at rising out of poverty," Raj Chetty, an economist at Harvard and one of the study's four principal authors, told The Times. |
The study tries to quantify the effect in several ways. One of the sharpest, I think, compares two otherwise similar children in lower-income households — one who grows up in a community where social contacts mostly come from the lower half of the socioeconomic distribution, and another who grows up in a community where social contacts mostly come from the upper half. |
The average difference between the two, in terms of their expected adult outcomes, is significant, the authors report. It's the same as the gap between a child who grows up in a family that makes $27,000 a year and one who grows up in a family that makes $47,000. |
The study is based on a dizzying amount of data, including the Facebook friendships of 72 million people. (You can explore the findings through these charts and maps from The Upshot.) |
Robert Putnam — a political scientist who has long studied social interactions, including in his book "Bowling Alone" — said the study was important partly because it hinted at ways to increase upward mobility. "It provides a number of avenues or clues by which we might begin to move this country in a better direction," he said. |
In recent decades, the U.S. has moved in the opposite direction. Rising economic inequality and a shortage of new housing in many communities have helped increase economic segregation. Even within communities, cross-class social interactions seem to have declined. |
This chart shows the extent to which Americans segregate themselves by class: |
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There seem to be three main mechanisms by which cross-class friendships can increase a person's chances of escaping poverty, Chetty told me. |
The first is raised ambition: Social familiarity can give people a clearer sense of what's possible. The second is basic information, such as how to apply to college and for financial aid. The third is networking, such as getting a recommendation for an internship. |
My colleague Claire Cain Miller, after speaking with the study's authors in recent weeks, set out to find some real-life examples of its findings. Claire focused on Angelo Rodriguez High School in Fairfield, Calif., a midsize city between Sacramento and Oakland. The school has an unusually high number of cross-class interactions. One of the people whom Claire interviewed was Mari Bowie, a 24-year-old who grew up in a lower-middle-class family that coped with divorce, layoffs and lost homes — and who made friends with richer girls in high school. |
"My mom really instilled working hard in us — being knowledgeable about our family history, you have to be better, you have to do better," Bowie said. "But I didn't know anything about the SAT, and my friends' parents signed up for this class, so I thought I should do that. I had friends' parents look at my personal statements." |
Today, Bowie is a criminal-defense lawyer. She found her job through the friend of one of her high school friends. |
Angelo Rodriguez High School is a telling case study because it is more economically and racially diverse than most schools. That diversity is necessary for a high level of socioeconomic integration. But it is not sufficient, the study's authors say. In some diverse communities, lower- and upper-income Americans lead relatively segregated lives. |
In others, cross-class interactions are more common. The study does not contain a complete explanation for the differences. But Claire discovered that the high school had taken intentional steps to connect people. |
The school didn't draw its students from only one community. It instead had an unusually shaped district, including both poorer and richer neighborhoods, and also accepted some students from outside that district's boundaries. The school's open architecture also encouraged serendipitous socializing. "Accidental, unstructured interactions between students was a very high priority," John Diffenderfer, one of the school's architects, said. |
What might increase cross-class interactions elsewhere? |
Among the promising possibilities, the researchers say: more housing, including subsidized housing, in well-off areas; more diverse K-12 schools and colleges; and specific efforts — like public parks that draw a diverse mix of families — to encourage interactions among richer and poorer people. |
Churches and other religious organizations may have some lessons to teach other parts of society. Although many churches are socioeconomically homogeneous, those with some diversity tend to foster more cross-class interactions than most other social activities. Churchs have lower levels of what the researchers call socioeconomic "friending bias." |
Youth sports, by contrast, have become more segregated, as affluent families have flocked to so-called travel teams. |
A successful effort to increase interactions would probably need to address the particular roles of race, too. More racially diverse places tend to have fewer cross-class friendships, the study found. |
"Our society is structured in ways that discourage these kinds of cross-class friendships from happening, and many parents, often white, are making choices about where to live and what extracurriculars to put their kids into that make those connections less likely to happen," Jessica Calarco, a sociologist at Indiana University said. Claire's story delves into more detail on the role of race. |
The stagnation of living standards for working-class and poor Americans is such a giant problem that no single change will solve it. But the explosion of academic research about upward mobility, including this new study, has at least offered a clearer sense of what might help. Social integration seems to play a crucial role. |
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Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David |
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Matthew Cullen, Claire Moses, Tom Wright-Piersanti and Ashley Wu contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com. |
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