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Positional Concerns across Generations
Abstract
Socio-economic comparisons (relative or positional concerns) have several implications for
utility, poverty, and economic development. This paper contributes to a small but growing
literature by investigating the intergenerational persistence of positional concerns in urban
Ethiopia, one of the world’s poorest countries. Using a series of survey experiments, we elicit
the degree of positionality for various goods with different characteristics: (i) material versus
non-material and (ii) visible versus non-visible. Our results suggest that the positional
concerns of parents significantly explain children’s level of positionality. The positional concerns
are transmitted to children mainly by the positional preferences of their mothers. Our
results are robust to alternative checks, including estimators and omitted variables. We also
analyze potential transmission channels. We identify gender – stronger between mothers and
daughters – and assortative mating of parents – stronger among parents married through love
marriage – as the primary mechanisms underlying the observed transmission of positional
preferences. We also discuss the implications of our findings on development policy.
Publisher
University of Gothenburg
Other description
JEL Classifications: C60; C90
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2025-11Author
Akay, Alpaslan
Martinsson, Peter
Tesemma, Tewodros
Keywords
Positionality
Intergenerational Transmission
Survey Experiments
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
859
Language
eng