Abstract

Historic increases in income inequality have coincided with widening class divides in parental investments of money and time in children. These widening class gaps are significant because parental investment is one pathway by which advantage is transmitted across generations. Using over three decades of micro-data from the Consumer Expenditure Survey and the American Heritage Time Use Survey linked to state-year measures of income inequality, we test the relationship between income inequality and class gaps in parental investment. We find robust evidence of wider class gaps in parental financial investments in children—but not parental time investments in children—when state-level income inequality is higher. We explore mechanisms that may drive the relationship between rising income inequality and widening class gaps in parental financial investments in children. This relationship is partially explained by the increasing concentration of income at the top of the income distribution in state-years with higher inequality, which gives higher-earning households more money to spend on financial investments in children. In addition, we find evidence for contextual effects of higher income inequality that reshape parental preferences toward financial investment in children differentially by class.

Highlights

  • The past 40 years have witnessed historic increases in income inequality in the United States (Piketty and Saez 2003)

  • We begin by describing the Consumer Expenditure Survey data that we use to test most of the hypotheses, and we briefly describe the American Heritage Time Use Survey data that we use to test Hypotheses 6a, 6b, and 6c

  • Our results suggest that income inequality may lay a foundation of unequal investment in children that could manifest in differential adult attainment

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Summary

Introduction

The past 40 years have witnessed historic increases in income inequality in the United States (Piketty and Saez 2003). Recent work suggests a narrowing of gaps in early achievement by family income, and a narrowing or arrested divergence in some gaps in parenting practices, even as income inequality has continued to rise, raising questions about this often assumed empirical relationship (Kalil et al 2016; Reardon 2011; Reardon and Portilla 2016). We develop and conduct a set of tests to adjudicate between these mechanisms, and we find evidence that this gap is the result of both the mechanical concentration of income and changing parental preferences

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