Upward mobility through a personal lens

Aaron Williams, for The Pudding, shows upward mobility through his own experiences, moving as a child from a low-income city to a higher-income city.

It’s unclear what my mom meant by “better opportunities.” Still, I got the gist that it was about the socioeconomic measures think tanks, policymakers and researchers use to measure progress: education, housing and income.

I thought, “can I actually measure if moving made a difference?” Indeed, your environment impacts your future outcomes, but to what extent?

I like the nod to W.E.B. Du Bois through style and geometry.

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Upward mobility and the potential for a better life

Upward mobility

An analysis by Raj Chetty of Harvard University and Nathaniel Hendren of NBER estimates increased income and education for poverty-level households, based on where one lives. The results are based on tax data — 1040 and W-2 forms — from the IRS, and the focus of the analysis is on those who moved from one county to another.

The main finding was that location matters. The Upshot mapped the results, with an article whose text changes based on the county you select.

The research is interesting on its own, but the interactive piece makes it personal, local, and kind of engrossing actually. I found myself searching every county I've lived in and the ones near them.

It starts by detecting your location and zooming into the county it thinks you're in. Then the body text and tables underneath change accordingly, signaled with a fading, yellow highlight. This essentially creates a localized report. As you scroll down, you can change the county with a click or a search.

Spend some time with this one.

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