Project News
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- Project Update
- Economic Mobility Project
Supporting the American Dream through Economic Mobility
As both Republicans and Democrats plan their conventions and their policy platforms, the strength of the American Dream is of even greater concern than usual. Pew’s work on economic mobility is of particular relevance to these discussions.
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- Press Release
- Economic Mobility Project
Bipartisan Economic Mobility Caucus Launched by U.S. Senators Wyden (D-OR) and Moran (R-KS)
On July 25, Pew's Economic Mobility Project (EMP) joined United States Senators Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Jerry Moran (R-KS) to formally launch the Economic Mobility Caucus—a forum for discussion about the facts and drivers of economic mobility in America. more
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- Press Release
- Economic Mobility Project
Pew Finds Most Americans Have Greater Income Than Their Parents, But Little Movement Up and Down the Economic Ladder
Pursuing the American Dream: Economic Mobility Across Generations shows opportunity is not the same for everyone. While 84 percent of Americans have higher family incomes than their parents did at the same age, those born at the top and bottom of the income ladder are likely to stay there as adults. more
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- Press Release
- Economic Mobility Project
Pew Finds States in Mideast & New England Have Better Economic Mobility Than National Average; States in South Have Worse
Economic Mobility of the States, released today by Pew’s Economic Mobility Project, is the first time research has identified where in the country Americans are more likely to move up or down the earnings ladder. more
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- Press Release
- Economic Mobility Project
Pew Research Uses Housing Boom & Bust to Measure Housing Wealth Impact on College Enrollment and Graduation Rates
A new Pew report, Housing Wealth and Higher Education: Building a Foundation for Economic Mobility, finds that low- and middle-income students whose families experienced increases in housing wealth just before reaching college age were more likely to attend college, more likely to attend higher-quality universities, and more likely to graduate.
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- Press Release
- Economic Mobility Project
Pew Finds Many Children Fall Out of the Middle Class As Adults
A middle-class upbringing does not guarantee the same status as an adult, according to a new report by Pew’s Economic Mobility Project, Downward Mobility from the Middle Class: Waking Up from the American Dream. more
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August 11, 2011
Economic Mobility and the American Dream
This video animates the difference between two measurements of economic mobility. more
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August 11, 2011
Is the American Dream Alive and Well?
Erin Currier discusses public perception on the American Dream in the wake of the Great Recession. more
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- Press Release
- Economic Mobility Project
Public Favors Increased Government Role in Promoting American Dream, According to Poll by Pew’s Economic Mobility Project
A new national poll released today by Pew’s Economic Mobility Project finds that 83 percent of Americans support a government role in promoting upward economic mobility, a sentiment that cuts across party lines. In fact, 58 percent think it could do even more.
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- Press Release
- Economic Mobility Project
Pew Quantifies the Collateral Costs of Incarceration on the Economic Mobility of Former Inmates, Their Families, and Their Children
Incarceration reduces former inmates’ earnings by 40 percent and limits their future economic mobility, according to a new Pew report, Collateral Costs: Incarceration’s Effect on Economic Mobility. more
Media Coverage
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Washington Post: Five Myths About the Middle Class
Both President Obama and Mitt Romney say they’ll support it. Many Americans say they’re in it. And virtually everyone says something must be done to help it. It’s the American middle class, and it’s the biggest talking point of the 2012 election—and one of the most misunderstood.more -
- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Deseret News – Moving on Up: Can the American Dream Still Become a Reality Today?
For some Americans, that dawn never comes. A new study just released by Pew Charitable Trusts' Economic Mobility Project finds that 43 percent of the people raised at the bottom fifth (households making less than $28,900 a year), stay at the bottom. Seventy percent of those raised at the bottom make less than $44,000 a year. A measly four percent struggle their way from the bottom up to the top fifth of earners in America.
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Five Facts About Achieving the American Dream
Before we get to our list of facts, I want to tell you about a dark and dingy room in the basement of the Institute for Social Research building at the University of Michigan
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Opinion: America's Mobility Scorecard
In America, we believe that anyone can grow up to be anything. One litmus test for how well America works is whether they rise above their parents economically. more
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Opinion: Romney Can Gain Upper Hand on Economic Policy by Focusing on Class
On economic policy, Barack Obama has left Mitt Romney an opening. The president has responded to a severe, continuing labor market slump with a four-year-old, marginally counterproductive tax increase proposal. more
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Economic Mobility: Who Gets Left Behind
Most Americans make more than their parents did, but that doesn't mean they're all moving up the economic ladder.
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Income Up, Wealth Down
A pair of interesting charts (via Kevin Drum) were released by the Pew Economic Mobility Program. They do some fancy statistical work to try to do an apples-to-apples comparison of today's 45 year olds with the economic welfare of their parents' generation at 45.
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Rags to Riches? That's Hollywood Fiction, Study Finds
Just 4 percent of people who grew up in the bottom fifth of the household income ladder made it to the top fifth as adults, according to a new long-term study showing the limits of American mobility.
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Two Thirds of Americans Aren't Economically Mobile
Only about one-third of American families will surpass their parents in wealth and income and climb to a new rung on the economic ladder, a new study out today from The Pew Charitable Trusts concludes.
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Are You Upwardly Mobile? Probably Not
The majority of Americans have higher incomes than their parents, but it is still not enough to move most of them into a higher bracket—especially those at the bottom.
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