But as with so many quests, the rush to find answers had lost sight of the real story. Economist Simon Burgess delivered a humbling message: the London effect could be explained away when the diverse composition of pupils was taken into account. Burgess argued the headlong rush to find the magic bullets behind the London effect was overlooking the real achievement: the dynamism of London's increasingly diverse population, composed if children whose parents had come from all over the world. ... [and] London is now the stand-out capital of graduate coupling. By 2016, a thrd of London families had two parents with degrees.
L.E. Major and S. Machin, Social mobility and its enemies (2018), 165-6
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