4.2 Article

Ethnic differences in intergenerational housing mobility in England and Wales

Journal

JOURNAL OF SOCIAL POLICY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0047279423000570

Keywords

housing; social mobility; wealth transmission; ethnicity; J62; I24; R31; P46

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There are significant differences in intergenerational housing tenure mobility across different ethnic groups in England and Wales. Black, Pakistani, and Bangladeshi households have the strongest intergenerational link between parent and child housing tenure, while individuals of Indian origin have homeownership rates similar to White British families and a weaker link between parent and child housing tenure.
Home ownership is the largest component of wealth for most households and its intergenerational transmission underpins the production and reproduction of economic inequalities across generations. Yet, little is currently known about ethnic differences in the intergenerational transmission of housing tenure. In this paper, we use linked Census data covering 1971-2011 to document rates of intergenerational housing tenure mobility across ethnic groups in England and Wales. We find that while home ownership declined across all ethnic groups during this period, there were substantial differences between them. Black, Pakistani, and Bangladeshi households experienced the strongest intergenerational link between parent and child housing tenure, and Black individuals had the highest rates of downward housing mobility. In contrast, those of Indian origin had homeownership rates similar to White British families, and a weaker link between parent and child housing tenure. These patterns are likely to exacerbate existing gradients in other dimensions of ethnicity-based inequality, now and in the future.

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