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Do past wealth gaps explain modern inequality? Evidence from immigration to the United States

Brian Marein
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Brian Marein: Wake Forest University Department of Economics

No 131, Working Papers from Wake Forest University, Economics Department

Abstract: Persistent racial wealth inequality in the United States is often attributed to the intergenerational transmission of historical wealth disparities. However, inferring the determinants of long-run inequality from group-level data is complicated by the arrival of 30 million Europeans during the Age of Mass Migration (1850-1924), who are by construction included in average white wealth despite having no direct claim to the wealth accumulated by earlier Americans. This paper accounts for this compositional change in the white population by documenting wealth dynamics among European immigrants and their descendants. Cash-on-arrival data show that immigrants began with substantial wealth deficits relative to the native-born. Yet by the late twentieth century, these deficits had closed, as indicated by comparisons between the descendants of later-arriving Southern and Eastern Europeans and those of longer-established Northwestern Europeans. This pattern implies rapid intraracial wealth convergence, in contrast to the slower convergence observed across racial groups. A stylized model shows that these differences can be largely accounted for by income. These findings demonstrate that large wealth disparities do not mechanically persist when groups have access to comparable economic opportunities.

Keywords: wealth inequality; intergenerational wealth transmission; immigration (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D31 J15 N11 N12 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 62
Date: 2026-01-22
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-gro, nep-his, nep-lab, nep-mig and nep-uep
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