Economic mobility and parents’ opportunity hoarding

Author:

Silverman David M.1ORCID,Hernandez Ivan A.2ORCID,Schneider Marlis3,Ryan Rebecca M.4ORCID,Kalil Ariel5ORCID,Destin Mesmin167ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208

2. Department of Psychology and Child Development, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, CA 93407

3. Norwegian School of Economics, Bergen 5045, Norway

4. Department of Psychology, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. 20057

5. University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637

6. School of Education and Social Policy, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208

7. Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208

Abstract

Creating opportunities for people to achieve socioeconomic mobility is a widely shared societal goal. Paradoxically, however, achieving this goal can pose a threat to high-socioeconomic-status (SES) people as they look to maintain their privileged positions in society for both them and their children. Two studies evaluate whether this threat manifests as “opportunity hoarding” in which high-SES parents adopt attitudes and behaviors aimed at shoring up their families’ access to valuable educational and economic resources. The current paper provides converging evidence for this hypothesis across two studies conducted with 2,557 American parents. An initial correlational study demonstrated that believing that socioeconomic mobility is possible was associated with high-SES parents being more inclined to attempt to secure valuable educational and economic resources for their children, even when doing so came at the cost of low-SES families. Specifically, high-SES parents with stronger beliefs in socioeconomic mobility exhibited decreased support for redistributive policies and viewed engaging in discrete behaviors that would unfairly advantage their children (e.g., allowing them to misrepresent their identities on school and job applications) as more acceptable relative to both low-SES parents with similar beliefs and high-SES parents who were less optimistic about socioeconomic mobility. A subsequent experimental study established these relationships causally by comparing parents’ responses to different types of socioeconomic mobility. Together, the current findings merge insights across psychology and economics to deepen understandings of the processes through which societal inequities emerge and persist, especially during times of apparently abundant opportunity.

Funder

Russell Sage Foundation

NSF

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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