Abstract

This paper proposes a process-oriented life course perspective on intergenerational mobility by comparing the early socioeconomic trajectories of siblings to those of unrelated persons. Based on rich Finnish register data (N = 21,744), the findings show that social origin affects not only final outcomes at given points in the life course but also longitudinal socioeconomic trajectories from ages 17-35 in early adulthood. We contribute to previous literature in three ways. First, we show that there is a pronounced similarity in the early socioeconomic trajectories of siblings. This similarity is stronger for same-sex siblings and stronger for brothers than for sisters. Second, we show that sibling similarity in full trajectories cannot be reduced to similarity in outcomes, i.e., siblings are not only more similar in the final outcomes that they obtain but also in the pathways that lead them to these outcomes. Third, our findings support that sibling similarity follows a U-shaped pattern by social class, i.e., similarity is especially strong in disadvantaged trajectories, weak among middle-class young adults, and increases again within the most advantaged trajectories. We conclude that measures of social mobility that concentrate on final outcomes are at risk of underestimating the association between social origin and destination because social inequalities are formed across the life course, not just at the end of specific life phases.

Highlights

  • Most research on intergenerational mobility and socioeconomic attainment has focused on outcomes observed in early to mid-adulthood, usually the highest level of education or occupational standing by a certain age

  • To answer our third research question, we identify clusters of typical early socioeconomic trajectories (ESETs) and calculate the probabilities of siblings to belong to the same cluster as compared to the probabilities for unrelated persons

  • The findings indicate that the siblings’ ESETs are more similar than those of random unrelated dyads

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Summary

Introduction

Most research on intergenerational mobility and socioeconomic attainment has focused on outcomes observed in early to mid-adulthood, usually the highest level of education or occupational standing by a certain age. The final outcomes perspective is at risk of either underestimating or overestimating the family of origin effects on social inequality across early adult socioeconomic trajectories. Social origin effects would be underestimated if the siblings were more similar in the final outcomes they obtain and in the Advances in Life Course Research 40 (2019) 85–98 trajectories leading to these outcomes. They would be overestimated if siblings are more similar in final outcomes but experience more heterogeneous trajectories leading to these outcomes than do unrelated persons

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