United States | Moving on up

Class, race and the chances of outgrowing poverty in America

A big-data analysis offers explanations—and hope

Illustration of two profile figures with weighig scales around them.
Illustration: Vartika Sharma
|Washington, DC

In late-20th-century music, the elusiveness of the American Dream is a recurring theme. From Stevie Wonder’s ode to a boy “born in hard time Mississippi” in 1973 to Bruce Springsteen’s anthems to the working class in factory-shuttered towns in the 1980s, frustration with people’s inability to outgrow their circumstances is rife. The timing of the peak of that genre is no coincidence: whereas nearly all American children born in 1940 could still expect to do better than their parents, only two in five could by 1984.

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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Moving on up”

From the July 27th 2024 edition

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