Institutions Matter: Economic Freedom and Income Mobility

Published: 2 September 2025| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/3g4bbkw45j.1
Contributors:
Vincent Geloso, Justin Callais,
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Description

Intergenerational income mobility — the ability of children to rise above their parents’ economic status — is a key concern in debates over inequality and opportunity. Most research has focused on structural factors like social capital, overlooking the role of economic freedom (market-oriented institutions, lower regulation, secure property rights). Using data on U.S. metropolitan areas, we show that higher economic freedom is strongly associated with greater income mobility. Children in high-freedom areas experience 5% to 12% more upward mobility than those in low-freedom areas. Economic freedom and social capital operate independently, suggesting multiple paths to mobility. These results highlight that reforms aimed at expanding economic freedom can directly improve opportunity — a practical lever for policymakers concerned with improving income mobility.

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Institutions

West Virginia University, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, George Mason University

Categories

Economics, Social Mobility, Income Inequality

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