Event

Intergenerational Mobility by Sexuality by Mathias Jensen

Join us for this week's event in the Applied Economics Research Seminar Series, Autumn Term 2025

  • Thu 13 Nov 25

    14:00 - 15:30

  • Colchester Campus

    Economics Common Room 5B.307

  • Event speaker

    Mathias Jensen

  • Event type

    Lectures, talks and seminars
    Applied Economics Research Seminar Series

  • Event organiser

    Economics, Department of

Intergenerational Mobility by Sexuality by Mathias Jensen

Join us for the latest Applied Economics Research Seminar Series event, Autumn Term 2025.

Mathias Jensen, from Oxford University, will present this week's seminar on Intergenerational Mobility by Sexuality.

Abstract

Existing research documents substantial disparities in life outcomes between same-sex and different-sex attracted individuals, typically disadvantaging same-sex attracted individuals. We analyse how parental background relates to adult children’s earnings, health, fertility, and family formation by sexuality. To do so, we develop a new strategy to identify same-sex couples in population-wide administrative data using joint financial commitments from Denmark. Our approach mitigates limitations associated with non-representative surveys and cross-sectional data on sexuality. We find that disparities in outcomes persist across the parental income distribution; (dis)advantages for same-sex attracted individuals are only partially mediated by parental income. We explore parent-child dynamics as potential mechanisms, including proximity to parents. Results are robust to controlling for unobserved parental heterogeneity through sibling fixed effects, but vary across childhood regions and cohorts. Our findings suggest that intergenerational mobility depends not only on factors shared by siblings but also on innate individual characteristics, such as sexuality.

The seminar will begin with a presentation and will end with a Q and A session.

It will be held in the Economics Common Room at 2pm on Thursday, 14 October 2025. This event is open to all levels of study and is also open to the public. To register your place and gain access to the webinar, please contact the seminar organisers.

This event is part of the Applied Economics Research Seminar Series.