Pfeffer Fabian T, Danziger Sheldon, Schoeni Robert F
University of Michigan.
Ann Am Acad Pol Soc Sci. 2013 Nov;650(1):98-123. doi: 10.1177/0002716213497452.
The collapse of the labor, housing, and stock markets beginning in 2007 created unprecedented challenges for American families. This study examines disparities in wealth holdings leading up to the Great Recession and during the first years of the recovery. All socioeconomic groups experienced declines in wealth following the recession, with higher wealth families experiencing larger absolute declines. In percentage terms, however, the declines were greater for less-advantaged groups as measured by minority status, education, and pre-recession income and wealth, leading to a substantial rise in wealth inequality in just a few years. Despite large changes in wealth, longitudinal analyses demonstrate little change in mobility in the ranking of particular families in the wealth distribution. Between 2007 and 2011, one fourth of American families lost at least 75 percent of their wealth, and more than half of all families lost at least 25 percent of their wealth. Multivariate longitudinal analyses document that these large relative losses were disproportionally concentrated among lower income, less educated, and minority households.
始于2007年的劳动力市场、住房市场和股票市场的崩溃给美国家庭带来了前所未有的挑战。本研究考察了大衰退之前以及复苏头几年财富持有方面的差异。衰退之后,所有社会经济群体的财富都出现了下降,财富较高的家庭绝对下降幅度更大。然而,按少数族裔身份、教育程度以及衰退前的收入和财富衡量,处于劣势的群体财富下降的百分比更大,这导致短短几年内财富不平等大幅加剧。尽管财富发生了巨大变化,但纵向分析表明,特定家庭在财富分配中的排名流动性变化不大。2007年至2011年期间,四分之一的美国家庭至少损失了其75%的财富,超过一半的家庭至少损失了其25%的财富。多变量纵向分析表明,这些巨大的相对损失不成比例地集中在低收入、受教育程度低和少数族裔家庭中。