Oakes FullChapter
Oakes FullChapter
Oakes FullChapter
1. Learning Objectives
After reviewing this chapter readers should be able to: Understand what socioeconomic status is; Appreciate the difference between a composite and a proxy measure is; Identify the three major uses of SES in research; and Appreciate the limits of SES measurement.
2. Introduction
Socioeconomic status is one of those terms typically learned in a seventh grade social studies or civics class and then used in college term papers to subtly suggest a deep understanding of how society works, or perhaps how it should work. While it is understandable that few go beyond a cursory understanding of the construct, among social scientists the term is serious business because it connotes ones position in the social hierarchy, how the hierarchy is structured, and very often ones consequent life chances. In other words, socioeconomic status (hereinafter SES) indicates ones access to collectively desired resources, be they material goods, money, power, friendship networks, healthcare, leisure time, or educational opportunities. And it is access to such resources that enable individuals and/or groups to prosper in the social world. Social hierarchy, or stratification, appears to be intuitively recognized by most everyone everywhere (Smith et al. 2011). During social interactions various indicators are typically displayed or revealed in order to convey ones SES to other members of the social group . Common indicators include professional titles, clothing, hairstyles, automobiles, residential addresses and so forth. All social animals, be they wolves, whales, monkeys, or humans, appear to appreciate, or at least recognize, social hierarchies and their position in them (Gesquiere et al. 2011; Sapolsky 2005). The level of sophistication of a hierarchy may be as simple as a pecking order based entirely on physical prowess, often with an alpha male atop.
Hierarchies may also be extremely multidimensional and complex, such as contemporary human societies, with innumerate subgroups and subcultures, and with stratification built along many lines including intelligence, appearance, talent, experience, age, pedigree, language accent, work ethic, and so forth. Relatedly, the level in inequality within and between dimensions of SES varies as well (Smith et al. 2011).
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 2
2. Introduction
Overview of the Research Process
There is a vast array research and inquiry into the nature and process of human social stratification over time and across societies, the mobility of actors within such societies, and the implications for well-being and life chances within the same (Krieger 1997; Oakes and Rossi 2003; Spilerman 2000; Van Leeuwen and Maas 2010). My take is that about half the work is devoted to descriptions and empirical facts about how a given society is stratified, and half is devoted to how a given society should be stratified, if at all. In any case, this is not the place to review the work or offer a serious taxonomy of it. Many contemporary scholars appear interested in SES because it serves as an indicator of the health of a social system or society, often measured against some egalitarian or meritocratic ideal. Informally stated, the meritocratic ideal is that regardless of birth right or inherited endowments, individuals may increase their SES through effort, including but not limited to the development of their inherited endowments (Bowles, Gintis and Wright 1998) . Societies without such potential are often viewed as less healthy if not backwards. For meritocrats and egalitarians alike, stratification based on birth (i.e., luck) or discrimination based on race, gender, religious ideology, or ethnic background are anathema to social or civil progress (Arrow, Bowles and Durlauf 2000).
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 3
2. Introduction
Another group of contemporary scholars seems interested in SES in order to rule out the long established effects of SES on various measures of well-being and life outcomes. For this group, SES is a nuisance variable; one that must be controlled for or eliminated as a potential explanation of research findings or theoretical arguments. Here, SES is of interest only so far as it eliminates effects that confound the exposures or treatments of direct interest. Given that there are volumes written on the topic, what follows should be viewed as a pragmatic summary for the applied researcher, by an applied research. In the main, I shall try to offer a few helpful citations to other work for readers interested in a deeper understanding. What is more, it is important to stress that my own work is largely focused around the relationship between SES and health in contemporary America. Consequently, this chapter is necessarily biased in this direction. I regret that I am not sufficiently skilled in the workings of other societies or time periods to do such work justice. The aim of this chapter is to present and review some contemporary measures of SES and to offer recommendations about how best to think about and use such measures and those like them.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 4
I maintain that SES is a construct that reflects ones access to collectively desired resources, be they material goods, money, power, friendship networks, healthcare, leisure time, or educational opportunities (Oakes and Rossi 2003).
It is access to such resources that enables individuals and/or groups to thrive in the social world. Those with higher SES tend to thrive and many aim to improve their SES or the SES of their offspring in order to improve their life chances. Although too often correlated with it, I do not think race or ethnicity are part of ones SES (Kaufman, Cooper and McGee 1997; Oakes and Rossi 2003). One should be able to improve their SES without changing their phenotype (including skin color) or linguistic accent. Further, I do not think health should be a part of SES, though health certainly affects SES. As with race/ethnicity, incorporating health into SES measures prevents our ability to discuss health outcomes by SES. Of course, phenomena such as racism disrupts social mobility and is therefore related to SES. Further, it is well established that poor health can cause down-turns in SES.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 5
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 6
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 7
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 8
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 9
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 10
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 10
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 11
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 11
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 12
Composite Measures
There are several well-known composite measures of SES. I offer a brief description of a few that are relevant to this discussion. Broadly speaking, the advantage of composite measures is that they offer potentially sophisticated scalar quantities useful for cross-tabulating coarsened or categorized SES measures by outcome measures. The main disadvantage of composite measures is that they combine constituent information and thus necessarily require strong theory about how to properly weight such information. If the weights that combine the information are incorrect, then the outcome scalar is incorrect, and the measure of SES itself is incorrect.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 13
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 14
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 15
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 16
SES that they dominate any more nuanced parameter estimates. Upon reflection, this should not be too surprising. The rules of social structure (i.e., structuration) cause strong correlations among all forms of capital: ones instrumental social capital is typically bound up in their education and occupation. Few impoverished persons are good friends with lawyers and doctors. The materialism of modern society clusters persons of similar abilities and interests.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 16
Exercise 2:
For each of the potential composite measures of SES, identify one advantage and one disadvantage and place one of each with the appropriate measure.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 17
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 17
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 18
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 19
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 20
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 21
Exercise 3:
For each of the potential proxy measures of SES, identify one advantage and one disadvantage and place one of each with the appropriate measure.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 22
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 22
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 23
(1)
The first major use of SES is as an outcome measure: the researchers typically aim to estimate the impact,
on SES. Composite measures are helpful here since they aim to capture the rich meaning of SES. That said, most health researchers aim to understand and explain not SES but health; health, not SES, is the outcome. Accordingly, I shall say nothing more about optimal measures of SES when SES is the outcome. The second major use of SES is as a primary exposure or risk factor for some (health) outcome. Here the goal is to evaluate the relationship, outcome variable of interest, ,between the latent SES measure,
Y , and the
because they aim to fully measure the latent SES construct and offer a scalar (even if coarsened and categorized) quantity for each subject. For example, one might collect or exploit data so as to assign each subject an occupational prestige or status score and then evaluate early mortality outcomes by each level of this SES measure.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 24
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 25
regression framework it is best to enter many (proxy) measures of SES individually because each will consume some of the variance of the outcome measure and, theoretically, free the exposure or treatment of interest from confounding bias captured in . Mismeasurement of one measure will leave variance for another to soak up. Use of a single composite measure is not optimal for regression control since, by the machinery of regression models, more variance will be accounted for by the component measures. However, use of a composite measure (including a propensity score) and multiple proxy measures is probably a good thing if such measures are available.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 26
Exercise 4:
For each of the following examples, decide which meaure of SES would b most appropriate. Some measures may be used more than once, and others may not be used at all.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 27
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 27
7. Recommendations
Another serious challenge comes in studies over the life course. Since it is possible, if not probably, that any given measure of SES may change over the life course without the latent SES changing at all, it is difficult to say anything about the impact SES has at one stage of life on an outcome (e.g., health) at another. Consider the theoretical aim of the CAPSES measure described above. Taking a snap-shot of SES at one point in time and using it to explain subsequent changes in a dynamic environment is difficult. Beyond the cohort effects of, say, the meaning of educational attainment across generations, the problem of SES over a given persons life course remains unsolved. In sum, I urge the reader interested in measuring and studying SES to avoid the most fatal of inferential mistakes, which is to claim that SES has been adjusted for. Since SES is always mismeasured, residual confounding is always a problem. Inferences may be profoundly biased and/or misleading in such cases. It is fair to claim that, say, annual household income or highest level of familial education has been adjusted for, but this is far short of saying (all of) SES has been. Indeed, after nearly fifteen years of considering the issues, I close by wondering if scientists should drop the term socioeconomic status altogether. The term socioeconomic status is fun to learn about in seventh grade and certainly helpful in casual language, where shortcuts are expected. But as shown here, the construct is imprecise and debatable for fruitful scientific investigation. It is worth emphasizing that while I wonder if the construct SES should be dropped from scientific discussion, I do not think the construct should be dropped. In fact, I think more attention is needed and wish to state clearly that dropping the idea of SES would be tragic on many levels. Ultimately, I seek a more careful consideration of the all-important construct and a better scientific and policy basic for research and action with it.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 28
8. Summary
What is Socioeconomic Status?
Socioeconomic status (SES) is a measure of ones access to collectively desired resources and is a fundamental construct in the social and health sciences.
Univariate measures
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 30
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 30
9. References
Adler, N. E., and J. M. Ostrove. 1999. "Socioeconomic status and health: what we know and what we don't." Ann N Y Acad Sci 896:3-15. Arrow, K.J., S. Bowles, and S.N. Durlauf. 2000. "Meritocracy and economic inequality." Bishop, Bill. 2008. The Big Sort: Why the Clustering of Like-Minded America Is Tearing Us Apart Houghton Mifflin. Bowles, S., H. Gintis, and E.O. Wright. 1998. Recasting egalitarianism: new rules for communities, states and markets: Verso Books. Bowles, Samuel, and Herbert Gintis. 2002. "The Inheritance of Inequality." Journal of Economic Perspectives 16(3):3-30. Cochran, W.G. 1957. "Analysis of Covariance: Its Nature and Use." Biometrics 13:261-80. Cochran, William G. 1963. "Methodological Problems in the Study of Human Populations." Annals of the New York Academy of Science 107:476-89. . 1968. "The Effectiveness of Adjustment by Subclassification in Removing Bias in Observational Studies." Biometrika 24:205-13. Galobardes, Bruna, Mary Shaw, Debbie Lawlor, George Davey Smith, and John Lynch. 2006. "Indicators of Socioeconomic Position." Pp. 47-85 in Methods in Social Epidemiology, edited by J. Michael Oakes and Jay S. Kaufman. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass / Wiley. Geronimus, A.T., J. Bound, and L.J. Neidert. 1996. "On the validity of using census geocode characteristics to proxy individual socioeconomic characteristics." Journal of the American Statistical Association:529-37. Gesquiere, L.R., N.H. Learn, M. Simao, P.O. Onyango, S.C. Alberts, and J. Altmann. 2011. "Life at the Top: Rank and Stress in Wild Male Baboons." Science 333(6040):357.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 30
Hauser, Robert M. , and John Robert Warren (Eds.). 1997. Socioeconomic Index of Occupational Mobility: A Review, Update and Critique. Cambridge: Blackwell. Henrich, Joseph, Robert Boyd, Samuel Bowles, Colin Camerer, Ernst Fehr, and Herbert Gintis (Eds.). 2005. Foundations of human sociality: economic experiments and ethnographic evidence from fifteen small societies. New York: Oxford University Press. Kaufman, J. S., R. S. Cooper, and D. L. McGee. 1997. "Socioeconomic status and health in blacks and whites: the problem of residual confounding and the resiliency of race." Epidemiology 8(6):621-8. Krieger, N. 2001. "Historical roots of social epidemiology: socioeconomic gradients in health and contextual analysis." Int J Epidemiol 30(4):899-900. Krieger, Nancy, David R. Williams, and Nancy E. Moss. 1997. "Measuring Social Class in Public Health Research:Concepts, Methodologies, and Guidelines." Annual Review of Public Health 18:341-78. Nock, Steven L. , and Peter H. Rossi. 1979. "Household Types and Social Standing." Social Forces 57(4):1325-45. Nock, Steven L., and Peter H. Rossi. 1978. "Ascription versus Achievement in the Attribution of Family Social Status." American Journal of Sociology 84:565-90. Oakes, J. M., and P. H. Rossi. 2003. "The measurement of SES in health research: current practice and steps toward a new approach." Soc Sci Med 56(4):769-84. Oakes, J.M., L.C. Messer, and S. Mason. 2010. "Messer et al. Respond to Positivity in Practice." American Journal of Epidemiology. Rossi, Peter H. , and Andy B. Anderson. 1982. "The Factorial Survey Approach: An Introduction." Pp. 15-67 in Measuring Social Judgements: The Factorial Survey Approach, edited by Peter H. Rossi and Steven L. Nock. Beverly Hills: Sage.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 30
Sapolsky, R.M. 2005. "The influence of social hierarchy on primate health." Science 308(5722):648. Smith, E.A., M.B. Mulder, S. Bowles, and K. Hill. 2011. "Wealth Inequality in Foraging, Horticultural, Pastoral, and Agricultural Populations." Current Anthropology 52(4):579-80. Spilerman, Seymour. 2000. "Wealth and Stratification Processes." Annual Review of Sociology 26:497-524. Van Leeuwen, M.H.D., and I. Maas. 2010. "Historical Studies of Social Mobility and Stratification." Annual Review of Sociology 36:429-51. Wright, E.O. 1985. Classes. London: New Left Books.
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 30
http://www.esourceresearch.org
Page 31