Health and Welfare Policy Forum

Public Perception of Social Mobility and Its Implications

  • Author

    Jang, Yoon-sun, Kim, Taewan

  • Page

    4-17

  • PubDate

    2026. 06.

  • Language

    kor

This article presents an analysis of key findings from a survey on perceived social mobility conducted by the Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs in 2025 involving 3,000 individuals aged 19 and older. While a relatively high percentage of respondents believed that individuals could improve their socioeconomic status through their own efforts, many also believed that parents’ socioeconomic status significantly influences that of their children. These findings suggest a gap between aspirations for social mobility and perceptions of the opportunities actually available. When asked how their current socioeconomic status compared with their status at around age 15, 48.8 percent of respondents reported remaining in the middle class, as they had been during childhood, indicating that opportunities for upward mobility are widely perceived to be diminishing. Perceptions of social mobility play an important role in individuals’ mobility beliefs, which means that the more persistent the perception that upward mobility is faltering, the more likely it is that social classes will become increasingly rigid. Policy efforts should therefore focus on expanding the overall opportunity structure and reducing structural inequalities that constrain social mobility.

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공공누리 공공저작물 자유 이용허락, 출처표시, 상업적 이용 금지, 변경금지
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    Public Perception of Social Mobility and Its Implications

    Jang, Yoon-sun, Kim, Taewan

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