Publication

May 2001

This paper investigates social mobility in Bolivia and discusses its implications for poverty reduction and long-run growth. Regressions based on household survey data show that social mobility is very low in Bolivia, even by Latin American standards. This is mainly caused by an inadequate public education system, a high degree of assortative mating, and insufficient rural-urban migration. As a consequence, poverty tends to be fairly persistent over time. Moreover, low social mobility implies an inefficient use of innate talent and poor incentives for work and study.

Download English (PDF, 47 pages, 185 KB)
Author Lykke E Andersen
Series Kiel Institute Working Papers
Issue 1046
Publisher Kiel Institute for the World Economy
Copyright © 2001 Kiel Institute for the World Economy
JavaScript has been disabled in your browser