Papers
AER2026

Elite Universities and the Intergenerational Transmission of Human and Social Capital

Andrés Barrios-Fernández, Christopher Neilson, Seth Zimmerman

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1
Latest record
2026-06-01
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AER
TL;DR

Do elite colleges help talented students join the social elite or help incumbent elites retain their positions?

AEREducationLaborRD
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AER
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EducationLabor
Methods and data
RD
Abstract

Do elite colleges help talented students join the social elite or help incumbent elites retain their positions? We combine intergenerationally linked data from Chile with a regression discontinuity design to show that, looking across generations, elite colleges do both. Lower-status individuals who gain admission to elite college programs transform their children’s social environment. Children become more likely to attend high-status private schools and colleges and to live near and befriend high-status peers. In contrast, academic achievement is unaffected. Simulations combining descriptive and quasi-experimental findings show that elite colleges tighten the link between social and human capital while decreasing intergenerational social mobility. (JEL I23, I26, J24, J62, O15, Z13)

Source versions
AER2026-06-01
American Economic Review 116(6):2120-2165
10.1257/aer.20230802
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