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Greater social mobility
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#146458
There is more social mobility in more equal societies.
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Planet Under Pressure »
Planet Under Pressure
Planet Under Pressure☜DebateGraph and the Planet Under Pressure scientists are collaborating to distill the main arguments, evidence, risks and policy options facing humanity in a dynamic knowledge map to help visualise and inform global policy dialogue and deliberation.☜F1CEB7
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3. Challenges to progress »
3. Challenges to progress
3. Challenges to progress☜What are the main obstacles to the implementation of the options and opportunities identified as potential responses to the crisis?☜FFB597
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Income inequality makes it harder for societies to progress »
Income inequality makes it harder for societies to progress
Income inequality makes it harder for societies to progress☜Evidence suggests that large income inequalities within societies damage the social fabric and quality of life for everyone, and, in doing so, make it harder for societies to make the kind of significant and systemic social, environmental, and economic shift envisioned at the conference. ☜59C6EF
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Benefits of improving equality? »
Benefits of improving equality?
Benefits of improving equality?☜What are the societal impacts of improving equality?☜FFB597
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Greater social mobility
Greater social mobility☜There is more social mobility in more equal societies.☜59C6EF
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[1]
More equal societies work better for everyone
Author:
Richard Wilkinson, Kate Pickett - The Equality Trust
Cited by:
David Price
7:52 PM 28 March 2012 GMT
URL:
http://www.equalitytrust.org.uk/why/evidence/social-mobility
Excerpt / Summary
People may move up or down the social ladder within their lifetime or from one generation to the next. That everyone has the same chance of moving up is what lies behind the idea of equality of opportunity.
One way to measure social mobility is to see whether rich parents have rich children and poor parents poor children, or whether the incomes of parents and their children are unrelated. Can children of poor parents become rich? Researchers at the London School of Economics have used this method to compare social mobility in eight countries. Using their data, we have shown that, at least among these few countries, the more equal countries have higher social mobility. It looks as if the American Dream is far more likely to remain a dream for Americans than it is for people living in Scandinavian countries. Greater inequalities of outcome seem to make it easier for rich parents to pass on their advantages. While income differences have widened in Britain and the USA, social mobility has slowed. Bigger income differences may make it harder to achieve equality of opportunity because they increase social class differentiation and perhaps prejudice.
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Entry date (GMT):
3/28/2012 5:55:00 PM
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