Unveiling the Cosmic Race: Intergenerational Skin Tone Gaps in Latin America and the Caribbean

World Inequality Lab Working Paper

50 Pages Posted: 31 Mar 2022 Last revised: 10 Feb 2025

See all articles by L. Guillermo Woo-Mora

L. Guillermo Woo-Mora

Paris School of Economics (PSE); Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS)

Date Written: February 03, 2025

Abstract

This paper examines how skin tone shapes intergenerational economic disparities across 25 Latin American and Caribbean countries. First, it analyzes the distribution of ethnoracial identities and skin tone, confirming Mestizo predominance and revealing how broad categories obscure substantial phenotypic diversity. Second, it documents non-linear gaps in income and education, with darker skin tones consistently linked to economic disadvantages. A variance decomposition shows that skin tone explains significant within-group variation, offering explanatory power beyond self-reported ethnoracial categories. Finally, using mothers’ education as a benchmark, the study provides novel cross-country evidence on skin tone gaps in absolute educational intergenerational mobility, revealing barriers to upward mobility for darker-skinned individuals. Robustness checks with machine-assessed skin tone data from Mexico—incorporating additional parental and contextual controls—confirm these disparities. These findings underscore the need to account for phenotypic variation when studying economic inequality in Latin America.

Keywords: Race, Skin tone, Intergenerational mobility, Inequality, Discrimination, Identity. JEL: J15, J62, J71, O54, Z13

JEL Classification: D63, J15, J71, O12, O54, Z13

Suggested Citation

Woo-Mora, L. Guillermo, Unveiling the Cosmic Race: Intergenerational Skin Tone Gaps in Latin America and the Caribbean (February 03, 2025). World Inequality Lab Working Paper, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3870741 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3870741

L. Guillermo Woo-Mora (Contact Author)

Paris School of Economics (PSE) ( email )

48 Boulevard Jourdan
Paris, 75014
France

Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) ( email )

54, boulevard Raspail
Paris, 75006
France

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
508
Abstract Views
5,298
Rank
116,825
PlumX Metrics