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What 21 Billion Facebook Friendships Say About the Economic Ladder In the US (theverge.com) 53

Meta publicly released information on 21 billion Facebook friendships as part of a research project looking at economic inequality in the United States, the company announced today. Along with new insights into the intersection of money and friendships in America, the partnership between Meta and the researchers gives us another look at who Facebook is willing to share data with -- and why. The Verge reports: The research team wanted to understand why people in some places in the US were more likely to move between economic brackets than in others. Using the information from Meta, along with other data, a research team built a dataset for a pair of studies on economic mobility, published Monday in the journal Nature. One study found that people who grow up in areas where there are more friendships between high- and low-income people are more likely to move out of poverty and up the economic ladder. "Growing up in a community connected across class lines improves kids' outcomes and gives them a better shot at rising out of poverty," Raj Chetty, a Harvard economist and lead researcher on the study, told The New York Times.

Many places, though, don't allow for much interaction between high- and low-income people, the second of the two studies found. And even when a neighborhood does allow for that kind of interaction, people are still more likely to befriend people in similar economic brackets. [...] [T]he full dataset, which covers 21 billion Facebook friendships, is available through Facebook's Data for Good program. People can search the public-facing website and see the economic connectedness of various communities, including their own. Researchers can download the data for additional studies. [...] The new studies offer valuable insight into economic mobility in the US, and the data could help researchers understand how people in the US build relationships.

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What 21 Billion Facebook Friendships Say About the Economic Ladder In the US

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  • by fred6666 ( 4718031 ) on Monday August 01, 2022 @07:53PM (#62754392)

    Social mobility should work both ways. So do rich people with a lot of poor friends have more likelihood of becoming poor too?

    • by Calydor ( 739835 )

      If the guy who makes a million dollars a year loses 50,000 per year he skips a vacation.

      If the guy who makes 60,000 dollars a year loses 50,000 per year he starves.

      If the guy who makes a million dollars a year gains 50,000 per year he buys his kids the latest gaming consoles.

      If the guy who makes 60,000 dollars a year gains 50,000 per year he moves to a nicer neighborhood.

      The same amount of money hits very differently if you're rich or poor; it is much harder for the rich man to lose everything than it is fo

      • If the guy who makes 60,000 dollars a year gains 50,000 per year he spends the next couple years paying off the crippling debt he accumulated the past few years, which should take him long enough that by the time he could afford to move into a nicer neighborhood, he can't anymore because prices skyrocketed due to the guy making a million already hoovered up all the real estate and flips it.

        • If the guy who makes 60,000 dollars a year gains 50,000 per year he spends the next couple years paying off the crippling debt he accumulated the past few years, which should take him long enough that by the time he could afford to move into a nicer neighborhood, he can't anymore because prices skyrocketed due to the guy making a million already hoovered up all the real estate and flips it.

          Wow..way to go Capt. Positive!!

          ;)

      • Look at it by family rather than by individual. A wealthy person is not likely to fall down the ladder by befriending people at the bottom, but what about their kids?

        And what value are your hypothetical numbers supposed to demonstrate? It's pretty obvious that having your annual income shift by 83% is vastly more significant than having it move by 5%, so what's the point? That raw numbers often fail to show meaningful relationships?

  • You have to risk.
    If you want to win big. you have to risk big.

    Some baseball movie from the 90's. At the time, I was impressed that somebody had the guts to say it out loud.

    Nobody has the guts to say the bottom line message out loud.

    If you refuse to risk, you cannot possibly win.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 01, 2022 @08:19PM (#62754430)
      The bottom line is that most of the rich had rich parents, and the few rich that didn't are an exception.
      • by RobinH ( 124750 )
        And yet the west somehow has far more social mobility [visualcapitalist.com] than the rest of the world. I'm not saying we can't improve. I'm saying you're not keeping things in perspective.
      • Where does the data presented show that? And would it be a bad thing for children to tend to do as well or better than their parents?
    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 01, 2022 @09:31PM (#62754574)

      Well, there's risk and there's risk.

      If a truly rich person risks 50 million dollars on a business, and it fails, it will affect their lifestyle not at all. It may not even affect their ability to try again. Oh, and, because they (and, yes, their families) have a lot of connections and a very good knowledge of how to work the system, they will be able to take a lot of their risks with other people's money.

      If I risk half a million dollars on a business, and it fails, I will still be living in the same house and eating the same food, and I won't be worrying about being on the street at retirement. And, because I have just a few connections and a reasonable grasp of how to work the system, I actually have a reasonably good chance of taking some of my risks with other people's money.

      If an actually poor person risks ten thousand dollars on a business... well, never mind, because they don't even have the ten thousand dollars, and they are NOT going to be using other people's money.

      But you keep telling yourself whatever makes you feel more comfortable.

    • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Monday August 01, 2022 @09:32PM (#62754578) Homepage

      You have to risk.
      If you want to win big. you have to risk big.

      And what doesn't make the news is all the people who tried and failed. There's no nightly news stories interviewing each small business owner who had to close up shop because they couldn't turn a profit. We make a big show of it when someone beats the odds and succeeds, but when someone throws in the towel, society collectively shrugs.

      • And what doesn't make the news is all the people who tried and failed. There's no nightly news stories interviewing each small business owner who had to close up shop because they couldn't turn a profit. We make a big show of it when someone beats the odds and succeeds, but when someone throws in the towel, society collectively shrugs.

        Well, no one said you would hit a homer the first time at bat.

        Successful people try to learn from mistakes AND to not let a failure demoralize or put them down.....they keep

        • by oumuamua ( 6173784 ) on Tuesday August 02, 2022 @09:09AM (#62755670)
          A 'second time at bat' is for rich people.
          It takes capital AND time to start a business. Poor people save up over decades for this shot. And if their business is going down, rather than cutting losses they double down and pour more money or even borrow to save it. They are typically penniless when it fails with no option but to go back to the 9 to 5 grind. It's another decade or two before they've saved enough to try again, but now they are facing retirement. Another failed business means going into retirement penniless. The poor only get one shot at a business.
    • How many people can you name that were poor or at least not at the very least well off and made it big in the past, say, 2 decades?

  • Being on Facebook is a determent to most Facebook users well being.
  • Bucket of crabs (Score:2, Insightful)

    by PPH ( 736903 )

    It's one thing to offer to mentor a person lower on the socioeconomic scale (SES). But watch the pushback from their old circle of friends. It's not an issue of telling people to stop hanging with the gang. But inevitably, as a person succeeds, they will find less time for the people from their past. And those people don't take that sitting down. In the extreme cases, where their old gang is actually a gang, that could result in punishment or even death. And even short of that, a lot of social and emotional

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Right, the US is full of revenge killings by gangs angry that their friends went to college and don't hang out with them enough now.

  • by Catvid-22 ( 9314307 ) on Monday August 01, 2022 @08:38PM (#62754466)

    The second of two links to the supposed pair of social networking studies is wrong. They both point to the same study, Social capital I: measurement and associations with economic mobility [nature.com].

    Based on the description in the summary and the article, the second study is most likely this: Social capital II: determinants of economic connectedness [nature.com].

    Many places, though, don't allow for much interaction between high- and low-income people, the second of the two studies found.

    They're both open access, which I suppose is the least the researchers could do, given their use of random users' data using merely the users' implicit permission.

  • Multiple reasons (Score:5, Interesting)

    by joe_frisch ( 1366229 ) on Monday August 01, 2022 @11:53PM (#62754736)
    One issue of course is that facebook "friends" are not actually friends in the normal English sense. They are contacts / acquaintances. So its not at all surprising that someone with a lot of wealthier contacts will find more opportunities.

    The other is that one of the barriers to success is what I'll call "secret" information. By "secret", I don't mean intentionally hidden, but just not widely known. For example, I've served as a mentor for low income high school students who didn't know that it was possible to get an exemption form the high cost of college applications. Also students who had never heard of science fairs. Then there are children from parents who don't know how the whole college application process works, or what is a reasonable career trajectory. How many low income families know that its possible to get very good intern jobs at the US national laboratories - you just have to know where to look for the programs.

    All these are things that school guidance counselors should know, but they don't. So having contacts with people who have higher paying jobs in these sorts of areas can be very useful.
  • Basically the study found easier access to benefits from nepotism improves chances of becoming richer. What worries me is how did they evaluate if a Facebook profile is rich or not.
  • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Tuesday August 02, 2022 @07:27AM (#62755290)
    I noticed they included "volunteering rates" in the metrics. I found it odd that the South was showing such low rates given the concentration of churches, which are the traditional home of volunteerism and where "social capital" and cross-class engagement were built. Being a member of a church pretty much means you are directly or indirectly engaged in at least one volunteer group. So, I looked to see how they defined it. "We start with the set of all Facebook Groups in the United States that are predicted to be about volunteering or activism based on their titles".

    So, not only are they likely to have skipped over a host of church-based volunteer groups, they're conflating them with activist groups - which are not the same thing. Yes, both volunteer and activist groups are forms of organized civic engagement, but they are hardly oriented towards the same goals and one is far more likely than the other to be intentionally directed at reducing "social capital" and cross-class engagement.

    These errors in collection and categorization will naturally distort the results and should be corrected before policy makers take note.

  • This says nothing about people smart enough to stay off of Facebook.

  • IMHO, this has a lot less to do with who you are friends with than it does with the fact that high-income people are going to live in areas with better schools and are going to work to improve them. The low-income people living in the same area will benefit from the better school. Just today, Scott Adams posits that George Soros would be better off trying to kill off the teacher's union and improve the schools in predominantly low-income areas.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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