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Social Stratification
in the United States
Chapter 9
Based on OpenStax
Introduction to Sociology 2e
 All societies have some form of stratification into groups, where
some groups are ranked higher and receive more rewards
 Systems of social stratification are long lasting and difficult to
change.
 Our beliefs and ideologies about why some are ranked higher than
others do not always reflect reality.
 The focus here will be on stratification according to class, but there
are many other categories we use as a basis of stratification
including age, race, ethnicity and sex.
Introduction
What is Social
Stratification?
 Resources are distributed unevenly in society.
 Social stratification: society’s categorization of its people into
rankings of socioeconomic tiers based on factors like wealth,
income and race.
– Wealth: net value of money and assets, minus debt
– Income: wages and dividends from investments (earnings)
What is Social Stratification?
 Stratification does not refer to divisions according to individual
ability, but systematic inequalities between groups.
 Factors that define stratification vary in different societies
 Open system of stratification: people have the opportunity to
change their position
 Closed system of stratification: people have no opportunity to
change their position
What is Social Stratification?
Great Recession (December 2007 – June 2009)
 GDP fell 4.3% (worst decline since WWII ended)
 Unemployment rose from 5% to 10% (Oct. 2009)
 Home prices dropped 30%
 Net worth of US households and nonprofits fell from $69 trillion to
$55 trillion
Now in recovery, but not fully recovered
Source: https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/great_recession_of_200709
Recent Economic Changes and
US Stratification
 A closed system
 People are born into their social standing and cannot change it
 Assigned occupations or a selection within a limited group of
occupations
Example – the Hindu caste system in India pre 1950 (officially abolished
in 1950, but still influential)
 Occupation and social interaction limited by caste
 Marriage must be endogamous – within the same social background
 Religion was used to support the caste system
Systems of stratification:
the Caste system
 An open system
 Class: a set of people who share similar status with regard to
factors like wealth, income, education, and occupation.
 People are free to chose varied occupations and education, but
social structure still plays a part in outcomes.
 People can have exogamous marriages– from outside their social
category
Systems of stratification:
the Class system
Meritocracy
 The idea that people get to their position in the stratification system
through their merit.
– If you work hard, you’ll get ahead
 Meritocracy doesn’t really exist
 Multiple social factors affect position in stratification system
Systems of stratification
 Refers to the consistency, or lack thereof, of an individual’s rank
across factors that influence social position.
Example
 A professor at Oxford is prestigious and her opinion is sought after,
but she earns the same income as a mid-level HR at the same
college.
Status Consistency
Social Stratification
and Mobility
Social Stratification and
Mobility: class
 Class – When sociologists refer to class, they are usually referring
to income, wealth, education and occupation
 Socio-economic status (SES)
Social Stratification and
Mobility: Standard of living
 Relates to material comforts and necessities needed to maintain a
lifestyle associated with a particular class.
 Very few Americans have the highest standard of living
– 1% of Americans hold over 1/3 of the nation’s wealth
– The next 19% of Americans hold 53.5% of the nation’s wealth
– The bottom 80% of Americans own only 11% of the nation’s wealth
Social Stratification and
Mobility: Standard of living
 Absolute poverty: a standard beneath which nobody could be
reasonably expected to survive
 Relative poverty: defined in relation the social expectations and
standard of living within a society
Social Classes in the United
States
What defines different classes?
 J.D. Foster (economist) defines class as
– Top 20% earners are “upper income” & bottom 20% earners are “lower
income”
– 60% in the middle are “middle income” earning $25,000 to $100,000
 Sociologists prefer to distinguish classes by their relative power,
which can include income but also includes other factors
Social Classes in the United
States
Upper Class
 Includes top wealth owners
 Corporate leaders, media owners, board members, philanthropists
– Hold power to make decisions that affect the job status of millions of
people
– Influence information dissemination and national identity
– Support social causes they believe in
 Status divide between “old” and “new” money
Social Classes in the United
States
Upper Class
 Includes top wealth owners
 Corporate leaders, media owners, board members, philanthropists
– Hold power to make decisions that affect the job status of millions of
people
– Influence information dissemination and national identity
– Support social causes they believe in
 Status divide between “old” and “new” money
Social Classes in the United
States
Middle Class (upper-middle & lower-middle)
 Upper-middle:
– highly college educated;
– comfortable income capable of providing large homes, vacations and
high quality education & healthcare for their children
 Lower-middle:
– also may be college educated;
– struggle a bit more to maintain decent lifestyle;
– Often hold jobs supervised by upper middle class
Social Classes in the United
States
Lower Class (working class, working poor & underclass)
 Jobs require little prior skill & often do routine tasks under supervision
 Working Class
– Hold decent jobs, often hands-on and physically demanding
 Working Poor
– Unskilled, low-paying employment with few to no benefits (retirement,
healthcare) in positions that are often seasonal or temporary
 Underclass
– Unemployed or underemployed; some are homeless
Social Mobility
 Refers to the ability to change positions within the stratification
system
 Upward mobility: an upward shift in social class
– Rags to riches stories are not typical of upward mobility
 Downward mobility: a downward shift in social class
Social Mobility
 Intergenerational mobility: class mobility across generations
 Intragenerational mobility: class mobility within a single generation
 Structural mobility: mobility facilitated by widespread societal
changes that affect large groups of people
Class Traits/Markers
 Typical behaviors, customs, and norms that define each class
– Can reflect level of exposure a person has to multiple cultures
– Reflects resources available to be involved in various hobbies and leisure
activities
 How much do class markers reveal class?
Global Stratification
and Inequality
 Global stratification compares wealth, economic stability, status
and power of countries
Walt Rostow – Modernization theory
 Origins of current global stratification stem from Industrial
Revolution
– Countries that were industrialized took advantage of the resources of
non-industrialized nations
– Created rich/poor, or core/periphery global economic model with
lasting effects
– Rostow presumed all countries must go through same development
path
Global Stratification and
Inequality
 How do we compare countries?
– Economic well-being measures
 Gross National Income (GNI): measures values of goods and
services produced by a country
– Value of tech production is greater than value of olive production
 Purchasing Power Parity (PPP): measures the relative power a
country has to purchase the same goods and services
 GNI & PPP are divided by the number of residents to create a
relative international unit to compare
Global Stratification and
Inequality
Theoretical
Perspectives on
Social Stratification
 Stratification system reflects values
Davis-Moore Thesis
 Stratification based upon merit
 High pay is incentive to take:
 highly specialized jobs that require a lot of training and delay entering
the workforce (e.g. physicians)
 jobs high in responsibility or risk (e.g. CEO, fire fighter)
Functionalism
 Stratification does not reward most skilled, but reinforces the
existing power structure
 Haves, or bourgeoisie – own the means of production
 Have-nots, or proletariat – own only their labor
 Bourgeoisie exploit workers to their own benefit; ensure class
stratification system continues
Conflict Theory
 Seeks to understand stratification from a micro-level; how social
standing affects their everyday interactions
 People interact primarily with people in similar positions and social
standing to themselves
 Appearance informs perceived social standing
 Conspicuous consumption: we consume goods to symbolically
communicate our social standing.
– We use products as a symbol of our status.
Symbolic Interactionism

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Social Stratification in the United States: Class, Mobility and Inequality

  • 1. Social Stratification in the United States Chapter 9 Based on OpenStax Introduction to Sociology 2e
  • 2.  All societies have some form of stratification into groups, where some groups are ranked higher and receive more rewards  Systems of social stratification are long lasting and difficult to change.  Our beliefs and ideologies about why some are ranked higher than others do not always reflect reality.  The focus here will be on stratification according to class, but there are many other categories we use as a basis of stratification including age, race, ethnicity and sex. Introduction
  • 4.  Resources are distributed unevenly in society.  Social stratification: society’s categorization of its people into rankings of socioeconomic tiers based on factors like wealth, income and race. – Wealth: net value of money and assets, minus debt – Income: wages and dividends from investments (earnings) What is Social Stratification?
  • 5.  Stratification does not refer to divisions according to individual ability, but systematic inequalities between groups.  Factors that define stratification vary in different societies  Open system of stratification: people have the opportunity to change their position  Closed system of stratification: people have no opportunity to change their position What is Social Stratification?
  • 6. Great Recession (December 2007 – June 2009)  GDP fell 4.3% (worst decline since WWII ended)  Unemployment rose from 5% to 10% (Oct. 2009)  Home prices dropped 30%  Net worth of US households and nonprofits fell from $69 trillion to $55 trillion Now in recovery, but not fully recovered Source: https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/great_recession_of_200709 Recent Economic Changes and US Stratification
  • 7.  A closed system  People are born into their social standing and cannot change it  Assigned occupations or a selection within a limited group of occupations Example – the Hindu caste system in India pre 1950 (officially abolished in 1950, but still influential)  Occupation and social interaction limited by caste  Marriage must be endogamous – within the same social background  Religion was used to support the caste system Systems of stratification: the Caste system
  • 8.  An open system  Class: a set of people who share similar status with regard to factors like wealth, income, education, and occupation.  People are free to chose varied occupations and education, but social structure still plays a part in outcomes.  People can have exogamous marriages– from outside their social category Systems of stratification: the Class system
  • 9. Meritocracy  The idea that people get to their position in the stratification system through their merit. – If you work hard, you’ll get ahead  Meritocracy doesn’t really exist  Multiple social factors affect position in stratification system Systems of stratification
  • 10.  Refers to the consistency, or lack thereof, of an individual’s rank across factors that influence social position. Example  A professor at Oxford is prestigious and her opinion is sought after, but she earns the same income as a mid-level HR at the same college. Status Consistency
  • 12. Social Stratification and Mobility: class  Class – When sociologists refer to class, they are usually referring to income, wealth, education and occupation  Socio-economic status (SES)
  • 13. Social Stratification and Mobility: Standard of living  Relates to material comforts and necessities needed to maintain a lifestyle associated with a particular class.  Very few Americans have the highest standard of living – 1% of Americans hold over 1/3 of the nation’s wealth – The next 19% of Americans hold 53.5% of the nation’s wealth – The bottom 80% of Americans own only 11% of the nation’s wealth
  • 14. Social Stratification and Mobility: Standard of living  Absolute poverty: a standard beneath which nobody could be reasonably expected to survive  Relative poverty: defined in relation the social expectations and standard of living within a society
  • 15. Social Classes in the United States What defines different classes?  J.D. Foster (economist) defines class as – Top 20% earners are “upper income” & bottom 20% earners are “lower income” – 60% in the middle are “middle income” earning $25,000 to $100,000  Sociologists prefer to distinguish classes by their relative power, which can include income but also includes other factors
  • 16. Social Classes in the United States Upper Class  Includes top wealth owners  Corporate leaders, media owners, board members, philanthropists – Hold power to make decisions that affect the job status of millions of people – Influence information dissemination and national identity – Support social causes they believe in  Status divide between “old” and “new” money
  • 17. Social Classes in the United States Upper Class  Includes top wealth owners  Corporate leaders, media owners, board members, philanthropists – Hold power to make decisions that affect the job status of millions of people – Influence information dissemination and national identity – Support social causes they believe in  Status divide between “old” and “new” money
  • 18. Social Classes in the United States Middle Class (upper-middle & lower-middle)  Upper-middle: – highly college educated; – comfortable income capable of providing large homes, vacations and high quality education & healthcare for their children  Lower-middle: – also may be college educated; – struggle a bit more to maintain decent lifestyle; – Often hold jobs supervised by upper middle class
  • 19. Social Classes in the United States Lower Class (working class, working poor & underclass)  Jobs require little prior skill & often do routine tasks under supervision  Working Class – Hold decent jobs, often hands-on and physically demanding  Working Poor – Unskilled, low-paying employment with few to no benefits (retirement, healthcare) in positions that are often seasonal or temporary  Underclass – Unemployed or underemployed; some are homeless
  • 20. Social Mobility  Refers to the ability to change positions within the stratification system  Upward mobility: an upward shift in social class – Rags to riches stories are not typical of upward mobility  Downward mobility: a downward shift in social class
  • 21. Social Mobility  Intergenerational mobility: class mobility across generations  Intragenerational mobility: class mobility within a single generation  Structural mobility: mobility facilitated by widespread societal changes that affect large groups of people
  • 22. Class Traits/Markers  Typical behaviors, customs, and norms that define each class – Can reflect level of exposure a person has to multiple cultures – Reflects resources available to be involved in various hobbies and leisure activities  How much do class markers reveal class?
  • 24.  Global stratification compares wealth, economic stability, status and power of countries Walt Rostow – Modernization theory  Origins of current global stratification stem from Industrial Revolution – Countries that were industrialized took advantage of the resources of non-industrialized nations – Created rich/poor, or core/periphery global economic model with lasting effects – Rostow presumed all countries must go through same development path Global Stratification and Inequality
  • 25.  How do we compare countries? – Economic well-being measures  Gross National Income (GNI): measures values of goods and services produced by a country – Value of tech production is greater than value of olive production  Purchasing Power Parity (PPP): measures the relative power a country has to purchase the same goods and services  GNI & PPP are divided by the number of residents to create a relative international unit to compare Global Stratification and Inequality
  • 27.  Stratification system reflects values Davis-Moore Thesis  Stratification based upon merit  High pay is incentive to take:  highly specialized jobs that require a lot of training and delay entering the workforce (e.g. physicians)  jobs high in responsibility or risk (e.g. CEO, fire fighter) Functionalism
  • 28.  Stratification does not reward most skilled, but reinforces the existing power structure  Haves, or bourgeoisie – own the means of production  Have-nots, or proletariat – own only their labor  Bourgeoisie exploit workers to their own benefit; ensure class stratification system continues Conflict Theory
  • 29.  Seeks to understand stratification from a micro-level; how social standing affects their everyday interactions  People interact primarily with people in similar positions and social standing to themselves  Appearance informs perceived social standing  Conspicuous consumption: we consume goods to symbolically communicate our social standing. – We use products as a symbol of our status. Symbolic Interactionism