How social and economic conditions impact socioeconomic mobility. The case of Spain
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Permanent income Socio-economic strata Social mobility
Fecha
2024-05-10Referencia bibliográfica
Luque Martínez, T. & Kamakura, A. W. & Del Barrio García, S. 91 (2024) 100931. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rssm.2024.100931]
Patrocinador
Andalusian Program for R&D [grant number P20-01019]; Visiting Professor Program (2021) of University of GranadaResumen
We rely on Permanent Income to define a socioeconomic stratification system based on a latent trait measurement
model using objective and widely available socioeconomic variables as reflective indicators, with an official
panel of households spanning 2006–2020 in Spain. We obtain an objective and transparent stratification of
Spanish society for these 15 years, and track social mobility at the household level between consecutive years
that included economic expansion, a major recession, economic recovery and a major pandemic.We have
quantified social mobility (greater in the extreme strata) in each of the periods of growth, crisis and economic
recovery. Crisis derived from COVID-19 has been more drastic and has affected more the consumption of
households under 65 years of age or with few members. In Spain, measures adopted against the effects of the
COVID crisis have generated less inequality than those adopted during the Big Recession of 2008.