Deirdre Bloome (Applied Statistics)

Date: 

Wednesday, April 13, 2022, 12:00pm to 1:30pm

Location: 

CGIS Knafel, room K354

Today's Speaker

Deirdre Bloome (Harvard Kennedy School), "Rising Class Crystallization? Trends in Multidimensional Class Inequality across Racialized/Ethnic Groups"

Abstract

In recent decades, U.S. income and wealth inequality grew, educational attainment rose, and occupational structures shifted. Because these dimensions of social class are intertwined---with higher education often generating higher income, wealth, and occupational prestige---rising inequality in one may have pushed some people toward the tops of multiple hierarchies, and others toward the bottoms of multiple hierarchies (polarizing people in the multidimensional space of class inequality). Are people occupying increasingly consistent positions across multiple class hierarchies? And has this class crystallization trended similarly for Black, White, and Hispanic people, despite their different opportunities, constraints, and initial class positions? We address these questions using data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, 1984--2019. To do so, we introduce nonparametric and parametric methods for studying multidimensional inequality, including models that jointly parameterize the mean and covariance matrix of a multivariate outcome as functions of covariates.

The Applied Statistics Workshop (Gov 3009) meets all academic year, Wednesdays, 12pm-1:30pm, in CGIS K354. This workshop is a forum for advanced graduate students, faculty, and visiting scholars to present and discuss methodological or empirical work in progress in an interdisciplinary setting. The workshop features a tour of Harvard's statistical innovations and applications with weekly stops in different fields and disciplines and includes occasional presentations by invited speakers.

More information is available at the Gov 3009 website: https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/applied.stats.workshop-gov3009