Arbeitspapier

Long live the American dream: Self-selection and inequality-persistence among American immigrants

This paper aims to explain the slow economic convergence between groups of different ancestries in the US, i.e. why these groups experience even less intergenerational mobility than individuals in the same country. It shows how excessively persistent inequality may be a long-lasting outcome of ancestors' self-selection into migration, and need not involve e.g. ethnicity-based behaviors. A testable implication is that the correlation between home country characteristics that influence self- election, and migrants' and their descendants' outcomes should increase generation by generation. Verifying this, their ancestors' migration distance has risen to explain around half the inequality between fourth-generation immigrant groups today.

Language
Englisch

Bibliographic citation
Series: CReAM Discussion Paper Series ; No. 14/17

Classification
Wirtschaft
International Migration
Education and Inequality
Geographic Labor Mobility; Immigrant Workers
Job, Occupational, and Intergenerational Mobility; Promotion
Subject
migration
selection
intergenerational mobility
ancestry
immigrant integration

Event
Geistige Schöpfung
(who)
Ruist, Joakim
Event
Veröffentlichung
(who)
Centre for Research & Analysis of Migration (CReAM), Department of Economics, University College London
(where)
London
(when)
2017

Last update
10.03.2025, 11:42 AM CET

Data provider

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Object type

  • Arbeitspapier

Associated

  • Ruist, Joakim
  • Centre for Research & Analysis of Migration (CReAM), Department of Economics, University College London

Time of origin

  • 2017

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