The Impacts of COVID-19 Shock on Intergenerational Income Mobility: Evidence from China

Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Sep 14;19(18):11546. doi: 10.3390/ijerph191811546.

Abstract

The COVID-19 crisis has caused a huge negative shock to economic activities worldwide, leading to a reduction in income and changes in income distribution. Intergenerational mobility is an important indicator of sustainable social development. This paper explores the short-term impacts of the sudden COVID-19 pandemic on intergenerational income mobility and personal income in China. Using the variation in the number of confirmed cases across provinces, we construct a province-level pandemic intensity index and combine it with individual data from the China Family Panel Studies (CFPS). We apply a general difference-in-difference strategy to identify the causal effect of the pandemic on intergenerational income mobility. We find that personal income is positively related to parental income, and that the COVID-19 crisis has caused a decline in individual income and exacerbated intergenerational income persistence. A more intense COVID-19 pandemic shock is associated with a larger increase in intergenerational income elasticity and intergenerational income rank-rank slope. We found that with one standard deviation increase in local pandemic intensity, the intergenerational income elasticity increases by 0.315 and the intergenerational income rank-rank slope increases by 0.198 on average. The mechanism testing suggests that heterogeneous effects among different groups are the force underlying the results. Low-income, low-skilled, and low-parental-income individuals have suffered a more severe impact from the pandemic shock.

Keywords: COVID-19; economic shock; income inequality; intergenerational income mobility; pandemic shock; sustainable society.

MeSH terms

  • COVID-19* / epidemiology
  • China / epidemiology
  • Humans
  • Income
  • Intergenerational Relations
  • Pandemics
  • Shock*
  • Social Mobility

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.