Galster George, Wessel Terje
Department of Urban Studies and Planning, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, 48202, USA.
Department of Sociology and Human Geography, University of Oslo, 0316, Oslo, Norway.
Soc Sci Res. 2019 Feb;78:119-136. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2018.12.016. Epub 2018 Dec 10.
The means through which socioeconomic status is transmitted across generations has long been of central interest to scholarship on inequality. We explore multi-generational reproduction of socioeconomic status through transmission of housing wealth by investigating how the tenure, size and location of housing occupied by grandparents relates to the tenure and value of housing occupied by their grandchildren. We estimate OLS, tobit and structural equation models based on Norwegian register data on three generations of families linked from 1960 to 2015. We find that those whose grandparents owned a large home in Oslo in 1960 had a much higher probability of owning a home in 2014, and among owners their dwellings were valued substantially more, compared to otherwise similar individuals whose grandparents were renters not living in cities. A natural experiment of housing price deregulation in Oslo indicates that resource transfers, not socialization of housing-related norms, was the dominant mechanism behind this process. Influences on parents' and grandchildren's income and education are substantial mediators. Results document the crucial role played by housing wealth in perpetuating social inequalities across several generations.
社会经济地位在代际间传递的方式长期以来一直是不平等问题研究的核心关注点。我们通过研究祖父母居住房屋的产权、面积和位置如何与其孙辈居住房屋的产权和价值相关,来探讨住房财富传递对社会经济地位的多代延续情况。我们基于1960年至2015年相联系的挪威三代家庭登记数据,估计了OLS、托宾和结构方程模型。我们发现,那些祖父母在1960年在奥斯陆拥有大房子的人,在2014年拥有住房的概率要高得多,而且在房屋所有者中,与祖父母是租房者且不住在城市的其他类似个体相比,他们的住房价值要高得多。奥斯陆房价放松管制的一项自然实验表明,资源转移而非住房相关规范的社会化是这一过程背后的主导机制。对父母和孙辈收入及教育的影响是重要的中介因素。研究结果证明了住房财富在几代人延续社会不平等方面所起的关键作用。