Article

Meritocracy and the inheritance of advantage

Details

Citation

Comerford D, Rodríguez Mora JV & Watts MJ (2022) Meritocracy and the inheritance of advantage. Journal of Economic Growth, 27 (2), pp. 235-272. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10887-021-09201-1

Abstract
We present a model where more accurate information on the background of individuals facilitates statistical discrimination, increasing inequality and intergenerational persistence in income. Surprisingly, more accurate information on the actual capabilities of workers leads to the same result—firms give increased weight to the more accurate information, increasing inequality, which itself fosters discrimination. The rich take advantage of this through educational investments in their children, and mobility decreases as a consequence of an increase in the ability to reward talent. Using our model to interpret the data suggests that a country like the US might indeed be a land of opportunity for the sufficiently able, as conditional on ability background may have relatively little effect. Nevertheless the US has a relatively low degree of intergenerational mobility precisely because meritocracy facilitates a high correlation of ability with background.

Keywords
Meritocracy; Intergenerational Mobility; Inequality; Statistical Discrimination

Journal
Journal of Economic Growth: Volume 27, Issue 2

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity of Edinburgh
Publication date30/06/2022
Publication date online05/03/2022
Date accepted by journal10/12/2021
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35087
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media LLC
ISSN1381-4338
eISSN1573-7020

People (1)

People

Dr Michael Watts

Dr Michael Watts

Lecturer in Economics, Economics