
Jason Voorhees
𝕯𝖝𝕯 𝖈𝖗𝖊𝖜 𝕵𝖊𝖘𝖙𝖊𝖗
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Specifically, the study found that a kindergarten student from the bottom 25% of socioeconomic status with test scores from the top 25% of students has a 31% chance of earning a college education and working a job that pays at least $35,000 by the time they are 25, and at least $45,000 by the time they are 35.
A kindergarten student from the top 25% of socioeconomic status with test scores from the bottom 25% of students had a 71% chance of achieving the same milestones.
If you are born into a poor family you will most likely stay poor aswell but the chances of a person born into a rich family ending up poor is higher than a person born into a poor family moving up social and economic classes. It is very rare(less than <5%) but still somewhat possible if you live in a first world country like the U.S, UK or Germany but if you live in the third world country you might aswell shoot yourself
but ofc oppressed gender has better chances than menThe report, which tracks mobility through the prism of education, finds that 46 out of 50 countries with the lowest rates of mobility are in the developing world. For instance, only 12% of people born in the 1980s in countries like the Central African Republic, Guinea, and South Sudan have achieved education levels higher than their parents.
Their core finding: Boys who grow up in poor families fare substantially worse in adulthood, in terms of employment and earnings, than girls who grow up in the same circumstances.

Rich Kids Stay Rich, Poor Kids Stay Poor
On Friday, a team of researchers led by Stanford economist Raj Chetty released a paper on how growing up in poverty affects boys and girls differently. Their co…
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