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The Global Social Mobility Index is an index prepared by the World Economic Forum. The inaugural index from 2020 ranked 82 countries and has not been updated since. The Index measures social mobility holistically through 5 determinants. The findings from the index were then used in the World Economic Forum's Global Social Mobility Report 2020 ...
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World Economic Forum: Global Competitiveness Report; World Economic Forum: Financial Development Index; International Institute for Management Development: World Competitiveness Yearbook; Gini index: List of countries by income equality; Bloomberg Innovation Index; Global Innovation Index; International Innovation Index; Index of Economic Freedom
2020 North Macedonia: Southern Europe: Upper middle income 33.5 2019 33.51 2020 Mali: Western Africa: Low income 35.7 2021 35.28 2021 Malta: Southern Europe: High income 31.4 2020 31.64 2022 Myanmar: South-eastern Asia: Lower middle income 30.7 2017 30.70 2017 Montenegro: Southern Europe: Upper middle income 34.3 2021 32.90 2020
Illustration from a 1916 advertisement for a vocational school in the back of a US magazine. Education has been seen as a key to socioeconomic mobility, and the advertisement appealed to Americans' belief in the possibility of self-betterment as well as threatening the consequences of downward mobility in the great income inequality existing during the Industrial Revolution.
Conversely, social mobility is used by sociologists to evaluate primarily class mobility. How strongly economic and social mobility are related depends on the strength of the intergenerational relationship between class and income of parents and kids, and "the covariance between parents' and children's class position". [28]