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Close Relationships and Culture

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 18, 2026

Using the FishSim Animation Toolchain to Investigate Fish Behavior: A Case Study on Mate-Choice Copying In Sailfin Mollies
10:50

Using the FishSim Animation Toolchain to Investigate Fish Behavior: A Case Study on Mate-Choice Copying In Sailfin Mollies

Published on: November 8, 2018

Marital sorting and parental wealth.

Kerwin Kofi Charles1, Erik Hurst, Alexandra Killewald

  • 1Harris School of Public Policy, University of Chicago, 1155 E. 60th Street, Ste. 164, Chicago, IL 60637, USA. kerwin.charles@gmail.com

Demography
|September 25, 2012
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Spouses with similar parental wealth are more likely to marry. This assortative mating by socioeconomic background is significant, even when controlling for education, impacting social mobility and inequality transmission.

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: May 18, 2026

Using the FishSim Animation Toolchain to Investigate Fish Behavior: A Case Study on Mate-Choice Copying In Sailfin Mollies
10:50

Using the FishSim Animation Toolchain to Investigate Fish Behavior: A Case Study on Mate-Choice Copying In Sailfin Mollies

Published on: November 8, 2018

Area of Science:

  • Sociology
  • Economics
  • Demography

Background:

  • Marital sorting by socioeconomic background influences inequality, social mobility, and social interactions.
  • Previous research has focused on education, neglecting social origins like parental wealth.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate marital sorting based on parental wealth, not just education.
  • To understand the role of parental wealth in assortative mating.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID).
  • Employed a genealogical design to analyze spousal parental wealth.
  • Controlled for race, age, and potential measurement errors.

Main Results:

  • Found a correlation of approximately 0.4 in parental wealth between spouses.
  • Demonstrated that spousal education explains only 25% of the parental wealth sorting.
  • Results remained robust after accounting for measurement error and marriage selection.

Conclusions:

  • Parental wealth is a significant factor in marital sorting, independent of education.
  • Assortative mating by socioeconomic origin has implications for intergenerational inequality.
  • Marriage patterns contribute to the perpetuation of socioeconomic disparities.