The Demographics of Wealth 2015, Essay No. 2: Education and Wealth
Ray Boshara,
William Emmons and
Bryan J. Noeth
Community Development Publications and Reports, 2015, 33 pages
Abstract:
This essay documents large and growing differences in financial choices and financial outcomes across educational levels since at least 1989, when our data begin.
Keywords: demographics; income; wealth (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015
Note: The Demographics of Wealth is a series of essays written by the staff of the Center for Household Financial Stability (2013-2021). The essays are based on the staff’s analysis of over a quarter-century’s worth of data collected by the Federal Reserve through its Survey of Consumer Finances. The results of the survey provide the most comprehensive picture of American families’ balance sheets and financial behavior over time. The series confirms the conventional wisdom that more education is associated with more income and wealth. But the essays also show that inherited demographic characteristics—your race or ethnicity, your age and birth year, and even your parents’ level of education—profoundly shape the economic and financial opportunities you have and the outcomes you achieve.
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:fip:l00101:103225
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