Abstract

The prospects for the next generation—whether young people, regardless of their backgrounds, have equal chances of social success—pose a momentous problem for modern societies. Inequality of opportunity, often reflected by social immobility, is a threat to the egalitarian promise and the stability of your society. This work argues that social capital transmission plays an important role for the chances of social success in Western societies. For the example of Germany, it is reasoned that weak social capital environments deepen existing disadvantages. Even though all levels of education are easily accessible and affordable, Germany has one of the lowest levels of educational mobility among the industrialized countries of the world. Problems appear to be systematic, since the decision regarding entry into higher secondary education is made at early age and is left, in most cases, with the parents, who rely on their own educational trajectory. Outside of the school environment, differences in social capital inheritance explain educational immobility. With the use of the German Socio-Economic Panel survey from 1984 to 2014, various analyses about the relation between social capital and educational success are performed. Social capital, which is helpful for educational and social success, clearly depends on the educational family background. This indirect link has been disregarded in past contributions. Alternative forms of schooling, such as comprehensive and all-day education, as well as a delay of the decision regarding entry into higher education, could help improving unequal social capital inheritance.

Highlights

  • Inequality of wealth is an increasingly addressed theme in social science (Piketty 2015) and the impetus of several public debates and movements, such as the “We are the 99%” initiative

  • The result section addresses the role of social capital transmission, which is assumed to be an unconventional determinant of educational immobility

  • The 2SLS model indicates that social capital factors, clearly shown for cooperative norms, are inherited form one generation to the other and determine educational attainment

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Summary

Introduction

Inequality of wealth is an increasingly addressed theme in social science (Piketty 2015) and the impetus of several public debates and movements, such as the “We are the 99%” initiative. The Inequality Matters 2013 report by the United Nations states that “ (...) growing inequality is responsible for all manner of political instability, as well as for the slowing of economic growth worldwide” (Lepore 2015). Several prominent scholars have agreed on this point, such as the economist Joseph Stiglitz in his book The Price of Inequality (Íşler 2015). The causes of inequality are much disputed. (...) Man hands on misery to man./ It deepens like a coastal shelf. Get out as early as you can,/ And don’t have any kids yourself.

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