The Power and Roots of Aspirations : A Survey of the Empirical Evidence

Aspirations have become a common theme in empirical economics studies, but there is no unified understanding of the range of outcomes they influence, the factors that shape them, and how to measure them. This paper surveys this growing literature. The paper argues that there is compelling evide...

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Main Authors: Fruttero, Anna, Muller, Noel, Calvo-Gonzalez, Oscar
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/332481625231659043/The-Power-and-Roots-of-Aspirations-A-Survey-of-the-Empirical-Evidence
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35916
id okr-10986-35916
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-359162021-08-12T13:32:42Z The Power and Roots of Aspirations : A Survey of the Empirical Evidence Fruttero, Anna Muller, Noel Calvo-Gonzalez, Oscar ASPIRATIONS EDUCATION EMPLOYMENT INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOR MEASUREMENT POVERTY INEQUALITY ROLE MODELS Aspirations have become a common theme in empirical economics studies, but there is no unified understanding of the range of outcomes they influence, the factors that shape them, and how to measure them. This paper surveys this growing literature. The paper argues that there is compelling evidence to consider aspirations as a useful lens to analyze human behavior and development outcomes, at the individual and aggregate levels, in poorer and richer countries. The empirical evidence aligns with the theory that high aspirations can lead individuals to achieve better educational, labor market, and other outcomes and can contribute to making countries more equal and prosperous. The empirical evidence also confirms that the mix of social and circumstantial factors shaping aspirations tends to hinder the aspirations of the disadvantaged—such as the poor, immigrants, and women—and can contribute to vicious circles of poverty, high inequality, low social mobility, and low growth. However, high aspirations should not be considered as an end in themselves as they can backfire, with deleterious effects, if unmatched with opportunities. Further, the paper argues that definitional and measurement issues can affect the understanding of the topic and that studies should more explicitly describe their measures of aspirations to ensure that divergent underlying concepts are not mistaken. 2021-07-15T13:27:33Z 2021-07-15T13:27:33Z 2021-07 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/332481625231659043/The-Power-and-Roots-of-Aspirations-A-Survey-of-the-Empirical-Evidence http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35916 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9729 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic ASPIRATIONS
EDUCATION
EMPLOYMENT
INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOR
MEASUREMENT
POVERTY
INEQUALITY
ROLE MODELS
spellingShingle ASPIRATIONS
EDUCATION
EMPLOYMENT
INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOR
MEASUREMENT
POVERTY
INEQUALITY
ROLE MODELS
Fruttero, Anna
Muller, Noel
Calvo-Gonzalez, Oscar
The Power and Roots of Aspirations : A Survey of the Empirical Evidence
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9729
description Aspirations have become a common theme in empirical economics studies, but there is no unified understanding of the range of outcomes they influence, the factors that shape them, and how to measure them. This paper surveys this growing literature. The paper argues that there is compelling evidence to consider aspirations as a useful lens to analyze human behavior and development outcomes, at the individual and aggregate levels, in poorer and richer countries. The empirical evidence aligns with the theory that high aspirations can lead individuals to achieve better educational, labor market, and other outcomes and can contribute to making countries more equal and prosperous. The empirical evidence also confirms that the mix of social and circumstantial factors shaping aspirations tends to hinder the aspirations of the disadvantaged—such as the poor, immigrants, and women—and can contribute to vicious circles of poverty, high inequality, low social mobility, and low growth. However, high aspirations should not be considered as an end in themselves as they can backfire, with deleterious effects, if unmatched with opportunities. Further, the paper argues that definitional and measurement issues can affect the understanding of the topic and that studies should more explicitly describe their measures of aspirations to ensure that divergent underlying concepts are not mistaken.
format Working Paper
author Fruttero, Anna
Muller, Noel
Calvo-Gonzalez, Oscar
author_facet Fruttero, Anna
Muller, Noel
Calvo-Gonzalez, Oscar
author_sort Fruttero, Anna
title The Power and Roots of Aspirations : A Survey of the Empirical Evidence
title_short The Power and Roots of Aspirations : A Survey of the Empirical Evidence
title_full The Power and Roots of Aspirations : A Survey of the Empirical Evidence
title_fullStr The Power and Roots of Aspirations : A Survey of the Empirical Evidence
title_full_unstemmed The Power and Roots of Aspirations : A Survey of the Empirical Evidence
title_sort power and roots of aspirations : a survey of the empirical evidence
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/332481625231659043/The-Power-and-Roots-of-Aspirations-A-Survey-of-the-Empirical-Evidence
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35916
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