Popular Posts

Thursday, May 07, 2015

To break the cycle of poverty in Baltimore, fix the culture of poverty

That’s the upshot of two fascinating new studies from Harvard economist Raj Chetty and his colleagues. In the 1990s, the federal government launched an experiment, called the Moving to Opportunity project. It created a lottery for housing vouchers that would allow the winners to move out of high-poverty neighborhoods into low-poverty ones.

The project’s initial findings were a disappointment for people — like me — who argue that culture matters quite a lot. It did find that neighborhood poverty was a big factor in determining economic mobility, but researchers saw little evidence that getting poor people out of poor communities and into thriving ones helped them all that much.

But Chetty et al. revisited the data, looking at how a move affected young children. The changes were enormous. The earlier kids got out of impoverished neighborhoods, the better they did over their lifetimes.

Poor kids who left poor neighborhoods were much more likely to go to college and earn more. Chetty estimates that giving kids (age 8 on average) a voucher to move into low-poverty areas increases their lifetime earnings by about $302,000. The data suggest that girls were 26 percent less likely to become single mothers.

In a larger study, Chetty and other colleagues looked at earnings data for 5 million families in the U.S. over 17 years. The findings were the same: Neighborhoods matter. A lot. Economist Justin Wolfers writes that these studies “are the most powerful demonstration yet that neighborhoods — their schools, community, neighbors, local amenities, economic opportunities and social norms — are a critical factor shaping your children’s outcomes.”

Wolfers is right to include a laundry list of possible explanations for why neighborhoods matter. The presence of economic opportunities in non-poor neighborhoods — i.e., jobs — is surely important. But not all-important. If it were, the initial findings of the 1990s study wouldn’t have been so lackluster.

Some social scientists argue that peers are more important than parents in determining how kids turn out. Others argue that parents, particularly married parents, are the crucial factor. And everyone agrees that schools, criminal justice policies and racial attitudes are important variables. The debates are about how much weight we should give them.

All of these factors influence each other. In very poor neighborhoods they combine to compound problems. In middle-class neighborhoods, they reinforce each other in positive ways.

More

3 comments:

  1. Fix the culture of poverty by finding a way for them to stay in school and actually learn something so they can get a diploma and then become productive members of society instead of the leeches they are.

    ReplyDelete
  2. 1:14 - you got part of it.....

    Another part is to bring back the stigma (yes it is intended to have a negative connotation) or drawing food stamps and / or welfare. Grocery stores used to only have one register available for these clients and folks were loathe to be seen in that line!

    Another part is the attitudes of the handout recipients - thinking they're owed a living for whatever reason!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Exactly 2:31 stop the political correctness BS and start looking down your nose at the leeches. Don't let your children associate with them because the bad behavior rubs off.
    Teach your child to be above having babies they can't pay for and associating with criminals and those who have no goals.
    Liberals like to say the illegitimate birth rate is lower in Europe because birth control is free and widely available.
    The rate's not down. It just was never high to begin with because Europeans still value a class system and no one wants to be thought of as low class.

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.