Ellen Bryer, PhD Candidate in Sociology, and Alexander Adames, Presidential Postdoctoral Research Fellow, published an article in Social Science Research, titled, "The Development of Racial Wealth Gaps in Early Adulthood"

Ellen Bryer, PhD Candidate in Sociology, and Alexander Adames, Presidential Postdoctoral Research Fellowpublished an article in Social Science Research, titled, "The Development of Racial Wealth Gaps in Early Adulthood." This paper was started as a final paper in Xi Song's (Assistant Professor of Sociology) Panel Data Analysis class.

Abstract:
While much research has documented stark racial gaps in total net worth, few studies have examined the development of racial gaps across different types of assets using longitudinal data. Drawing on data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (1997), we study the emergence of Black-White and Hispanic-White wealth gaps across different types of assets and debt among a recent cohort of young adults. We find that the gaps in net worth, financial assets, home equity, and debt all increase over time. The racial gaps in financial assets widen at a rate that exceeds the corresponding gaps in other components of net worth. Indeed, a decomposition analysis reveals that financial assets contribute more than home equity to exacerbating net worth disparities. Our findings underscore the unique role that financial assets play in expanding racial wealth gaps in young adulthood.

Access the paper here ➡️  "The Development of Racial Wealth Gaps in Early Adulthood"