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
Pew Study: Americans In The Northeast Have More Economic Mobility
A new study from the Pew Charitable Trusts finds economic mobility differs significantly across the United States. The report finds Americans are more likely to move up the economic ladder if they live in the northeast. more
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Climbing Income Ladder Easier in New Jersey Than Texas, Pew Says
A week after the Occupy Wall Street movement protested economic inequality in May Day rallies across the U.S., a study found that the ability to become rich may depend on where you live. more
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Study: Economic Opportunity Better in Northeast, Worse in South
They call it the American Dream, but it doesn't seem to be stretching from sea to shining sea. more
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Study: Economic Mobility Depends on the State You Live In
The ability of individuals to achieve the American dream depends on where they live, according to the first state-by-state look at the opportunity to move up the economic ladder. more
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Ky. Worse Than US in Movement on Earnings Ladder
A new study of which states are more likely to have residents moving up or down the earnings ladder has been released, and Kentucky is among the nine Southern states that have economic mobility below the national average. more
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Memo to Would-Be Members of the 1%: Move to the Northeast or Mid-Atlantic
Reaching for the American dream? Your best chances are probably in New York, New Jersey or Maryland. more
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Pa. Workers More 'Upwardly Mobile'
Body Copy:
moreA new study of government economic data finds that Pennsylvania residents are more upwardly mobile than average, attaining greater heights on the earnings ladder than residents of most other states.
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Majority Of Jobless Still Say American Dream Within Reach: Report
Despite the economic hardship that the Great Recession has caused millions of Americans, belief in the American Dream is still alive and well, even for those who suffered the most.
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
The Reproduction of Privilege
Instead of serving as a springboard to social mobility as it did for the first decades after World War II, college education today is reinforcing class stratification, with a huge majority of the 24 percent of Americans aged 25 to 29 currently holding a bachelor’s degree coming from families with earnings above the median income. more
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- Media Coverage
- Economic Mobility Project
Mitt Romney's a Self-Made Man?
MY MOTHER grew up on the black side of segregated Mississippi in a family of teachers, preachers, and sharecroppers. She won money to go to college from an oratorical prize. My father - the son of an Italian immigrant - spent his childhood in a small town in Pennsylvania. He saw himself as middle class because he had two pairs of pants. (Poor people only had one.)Like millions of Americans, they climbed the socioeconomic ladder painstakingly, through scholarships and federal loans and research grants. They became university professors. Yet I have never heard either of them ever claim to be “self-made.’’
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