The federal government aimed to test if housing policy could improve economic outcomes like jobs, earnings, and education by moving people from high-poverty to low-poverty neighborhoods.
The experiment found that moving to low-poverty neighborhoods did not significantly improve long-term employment, educational, or income outcomes for families, contrary to initial expectations.
Hendren's analysis revealed that moving to better neighborhoods significantly improved economic outcomes for children who moved before the age of thirteen, contradicting the earlier findings that showed no significant impact.
Social capital, particularly the interaction between low and high-income individuals in a community, emerged as a strong predictor of economic mobility, influencing outcomes more than just resource availability.
The gap has narrowed for some subgroups, like low-income black families, who now have slightly better chances of rising economically. However, low-income white communities have seen worse chances compared to the past.
Moving to a higher-opportunity area is still considered the most powerful way to improve economic prospects for a child from a poor family, according to the research.
Back in the 90s, the federal government ran a bold experiment, giving people vouchers to move out of high-poverty neighborhoods into low-poverty ones. They wanted to test if housing policy could be hope – whether an address change alone could improve jobs, earnings and education.The answer to that seems obvious. But it did not at all turn out as they expected.Years later, when new researchers went back to the data on this experiment, they stumbled on something big. Something that is changing housing policy across the country today.*Today's episode was originally hosted by Karen Duffin, produced by Aviva DeKornfeld, and edited by Bryant Urstadt. The update was hosted by Amanda Aronczyk, produced by Sean Saldana and fact checked by Sierra Juarez. Our supervising executive producer is Alex Goldmark.Help support Planet Money and hear our bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts) or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney).*Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices)NPR Privacy Policy)