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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Nov 2.
Published in final edited form as: Socius. 2020 Jun 1;6:10.1177/2378023120916616. doi: 10.1177/2378023120916616

Table 2.

Regressions on Percentile Net Worth and Percentile Income for Child Households, Including Interaction Terms between Year and Race/Ethnicity (n = 9,889).

Percentile Net Worth Percentile Income
Race/ethnicity
 White (reference)
 Black −5.91 (1.02)*** −7.87 (1.39)***
 Hispanic −4.01 (1.09)*** −6.93 (1.35)***
 Other race −1.69 (.54)** −5.71 (.61)***
Year
 2004 (reference)
 2007 −1.33 (.67)* .48 (.68)
 2010 −1.25 (.75) −1.30 (.64)*
 2013 .20 (.84) −.19 (.69)
 2016 −.91 (.71) −.26 (.72)
Interaction terms
 Black × 2007 2.81 (1.70) −1.68 (1.91)
 Black × 2010 .29 (1.52) 1.53 (1.73)
 Black × 2013 −2.64 (1.33)* −1.47 (1.61)
 Black × 2016 −3.39 (1.31)* .68 (1.81)
 Hispanic × 2007 2.29 (1.54) −.28 (1.78)
 Hispanic × 2010 1.60 (1.31) −.52 (1.57)
 Hispanic × 2013 .64 (1.48) −2.80 (1.49)
 Hispanic × 2016 −.21 (1.48) −1.66 (1.57)

Note: All estimates are weighted. Standard errors are in parentheses. Models control for relationship status, age, square of age, education of head, number of children in the household, whether the youngest child is younger than 6, and the presence of an elderly person in household. The model for percentile net worth controls for income (logged and squared).

*

p < .05.

**

p < .01.

***

p < .001.