Intergenerational Mobility in the Very Long Run: Florence 1427–2011

Author:

Barone Guglielmo1,Mocetti Sauro2

Affiliation:

1. University of Padua and RCEA

2. Bank of Italy

Abstract

Abstract We examine intergenerational mobility in the very long run, across generations that are six centuries apart. We exploit a unique dataset containing detailed information at the individual level for all people living in the Italian city of Florence in 1427. These individuals have been associated, using their surnames, with their pseudo-descendants living in Florence in 2011. We find that long-run earnings elasticity is about 0.04; we also find an even stronger role for real wealth inheritance and evidence of persistence in belonging to certain elite occupations. Our results are confirmed when we account for the quality of the pseudo-links and when we address the potential selectivity bias behind the matching process. Finally, we frame our results within the existing evidence and argue that the quasi-immobility of preindustrial society and the existence of multigenerational effects might explain the long-lasting effects of ancestors’ socioeconomic status.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

Reference55 articles.

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4. The Effect of Age at School Entry on Educational Attainment: An Application of Instrumental Variables with Moments from Two Samples;ANGRIST,;Journal of the American Statistical Association,1992

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