Papers
AEJ Applied2026

The Effects of Racial Segregation on Intergenerational Mobility: Evidence from Historical Railroad Placement

Eric Chyn, Kareem Haggag, Bryan A. Stuart

Source versions
1
Latest record
2026-04-01
Primary source
AEJ Applied
TL;DR

This paper provides new evidence on the causal impacts of citywide racial segregation on intergenerational mobility.

AEJ AppliedLaborPublic FinanceIV
Metadata matches
Sources
AEJ Applied
Fields
LaborPublic Finance
Methods and data
IV
Abstract

This paper provides new evidence on the causal impacts of citywide racial segregation on intergenerational mobility. We use an instrumental variable approach that relies on plausibly exogenous variation in segregation due to the arrangement of railroad tracks in the nineteenth century. Our analysis finds that higher segregation reduces upward mobility for Black children from households across the income distribution and White children from low-income households. Moreover, segregation lowers academic achievement while increasing incarceration and teenage birth rates. An analysis of mechanisms shows that segregation reduces government spending, weakens support for antipoverty policies, and increases racially conservative attitudes among White residents. (JEL I38, J13, J15, J62, N32, N72, R30)

Source versions
AEJ Applied2026-04-01
American Economic Journal Applied Economics 18(2):34-60
10.1257/app.20240271
Related papers
ReStat2026-01-01The Review of Economics and Statistics 108(1):145-161

The Political Costs of Austerity

Ricardo Duque Gabriel, Mathias Klein, Ana Sofia Pessoa

ReStatLaborPublic FinanceIV