Greater levels of social mobility are widely seen as desirable on grounds of both equity and
efficiency. Debate on social mobility in Britain and elsewhere has recently focused on
specific factors that might hinder social mobility, including the role of internships and similar
employment opportunities that parents can sometimes secure for their children. We
address the help that parents give their children in the job market using data from the
recently collected age 42 wave of the 1970 British Cohort Study. In doing so, we consider
help given to people from all family backgrounds and not just to graduates and those in
higher level occupations who have tended to be the focus in the debate in Britain.
Specifically, our data measure whether respondents had ever had help to get a job from (i)
parents and (ii) other relatives and friends and the form of that help. We first assess the
extent and type of help. We then determine whether people from higher socio-economic
status families are more or less likely to have such help and whether the help is associated
with higher wages and higher occupations. Our paper provides insight into whether the
strong link between parental socio-economic background and the individual’s own
economic success can be explained in part by the fact that parents assist their children to
get jobs.