People from elite backgrounds increasingly dominate academia, data shows [View all]
DEPARTMENT OF DATA
People from elite backgrounds increasingly dominate academia, data shows
First-generation academics were always rare. Now theyre vanishing.
Analysis by Andrew Van Dam
Staff writer | Follow
July 8, 2022 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
To understand critical issues facing the U.S. economy soaring inflation, worker shortages and perhaps a looming recession researchers must understand human behavior. They need to know how everyday Americans will react when pump prices double or shelves go bare. ... Thats why its somewhat alarming to learn that academia in general and economics in particular has quietly become the province of an insular elite, a group likely to have had little exposure to the travails of Americas vast middle class.
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In 1970, just 1 in 5 U.S.-born PhD graduates in economics had a parent with a graduate degree. Now? Two-thirds of them do, according to a new analysis from the Peterson Institute for International Economics. The trends are similar for other fields (and for foreign-born students), but economics is off the charts. ... This partly reflects population trends: Over that same period, the share of parents with graduate degrees and college-age children rose 10 percentage points, to 14 percent, our analysis of Census Bureau data shows. But compared with the typical American, a typical new economist is about five times more likely to have a parent with a graduate degree.
The
new analysis comes from Anna Stansbury of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and University of Michigan graduate student Robert Schultz, who got their hands on detailed data on U.S. PhD recipients going back more than 50 years. The data includes extensive information about almost half a million recipients in the 2010-to-2018 period alone. ... It shows that the elite dominate even more among the top schools that produce about half of all future economics professors. Among the top 15 programs, 78 percent of new PhDs since 2010 had a parent with a graduate degree while just 6 percent are first-generation college students.
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By Andrew Van Dam
Andrew Van Dam writes the Department of Data column each week for The Washington Post. He has covered economics and wrangled data and graphics for The Post and the Wall Street Journal. Twitter
https://twitter.com/andrewvandam