The monograph titled New Methods for Measuring Inequality by Analyzing Assortative Mating offers a comprehensive account of the methods and models proposed in the literature for measuring the degree of sorting into couples with the aim of identifying patterns in inequality. It starts with the premise that it is a sign of increasing overall inequality between different social groups if a generation is less permissive of their members to choose a partner outside their own educational group or racial group relative to an earlier-born generation. In the same vain, the comparison across countries works just as well as it works inter-temporally.
At its core, the book not only guides readers through a diverse array of models and methods but also introduces innovative approaches for selecting tools that are fit for the purpose of quantifying the inherently unobservable degree of sorting. The need for thoughtful model and method selection is underscored by demonstrating that competing tools often yield qualitatively different patternseven when applied to the same data on real or fictitious populations of couples.
Using two of the methods from the well-performing set of tools and census data from nearly 80 countriessourced from the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series (IPUMS)the book illustrates the potential of studying inequality through patterns of sorting along education, as well as along race in the case of the United States.
The book offers an intellectually stimulating journey for both academic and policy researchers. Along the way, it meets ambitious goals, i.e., to dispel common misconceptions in the literature about the direction of causal relationship between assortative mating and inequality, to challenge established conventions on their measurements, andtrue to its constructive spiritto introduce approaches that perform well in practice.
Chapter 1. From Questions to Methods: An Overview of the Book.
Chapter
2. Introduction: Motivations and Goals.
Chapter
3. U-shaped Trend in Various
Dimensions of Inequality in the US.
Chapter
4. Closing Racial Gap in the
US.
Chapter
5. Tools for Analyzing Educational Assortative Mating.
Chapter
6. The Framework of Sorting along a Single Trait without Singles.
Chapter
7.
The Framework of Sorting along a Single Trait with Singles.
Chapter
8. The
Framework of Sorting along Multiple Traits without Singles.
Chapter
9. The
Framework of Sorting along Multiple Traits with Singles.
Chapter
10. The
Challenge of and the Need for Selecting the Suitable Analytical Tools.-
Chapter
11. Selecting the Suitable Analytical Tools.
Chapter
12. Application
of a Well-performing Analytical Tool to Multiple Countries.
Chapter
13.
Trends in Sorting along Race in the US at the National Level.
Chapter
14.
Conclusions.
Anna Naszodi is the Founding Director of the International Demographic Inequality Lab (IDIL), a Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Turku, and an Honorary Member of the Centre for Economic and Regional Studies (KRTK-KTI). She previously worked as a Lead Researcher at the Central Bank of Hungary and as a Scientific Project Officer at the Joint Research Centre (JRC) of the European Commission. While affiliated with the JRC, she began her research project on inequality and assortative mating. Her papers on this topicand on some othershave been published in the Journal of Demographic Economics, the International Journal of Central Banking, and the Journal of International Money and Finance. Her work has also been featured in Defacto (in Hungarian), in a VoxEU column, and in The New York Times.