The geography of intergenerational mobility in Norway: Labor market diversity, career opportunities, and gender
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Accepted version
Date
2024Metadata
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- NOVA andre dokumenter [97]
- Publikasjoner fra Cristin [3423]
Original version
10.1111/jors.12731Abstract
We investigate intergenerational income mobility across
labor market regions in Norway, looking at gender differ-
ences in response to industrial diversity. Our identification
strategy exploits variation in the timing of regional migra-
tion, measured over the age spans 6−19 and 13−19 years.
We make extensive use of fixed effects so that each region
only affects adult outcomes, measured as income rank,
through differences in exposure time. Our results reveal
significantly larger exposure effects among daughters than
among sons. The difference is particularly large when we
contrast sons to fathers and daughters to mothers, but it is
also apparent when we place sons and daughters, respec-
tively, fathers and mothers, in the same distribution. We
further find that industrial diversity, and thus the range of
job opportunities, matters most during the teenage years.
The patterns are, to some extent, detectible on maps, for
example, with better mobility opportunities for men in
coastal regions based on maritime and/or marine special-
ization. We conclude with assessments, a recommendation
for regional policy, and some international considerations.