Full Citation
Title: Determinants of Immigrant Earnings in the Time Series (1950-2004)
Citation Type: Dissertation/Thesis
Publication Year: 2021
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Abstract: This paper seeks to document how immigrant earnings for a given country evolve over timeand identify evidence from immigration literature that could explain any observable trends. By analyzing birth cohorts of immigrants from IPUMS Microsamples and the American Community Survey, I find that immigrant earnings have been increasing since 1950 with each cohort, earning 0.95% higher wages per year relative to natives. I also attempt to rationalize the presence this cohort trend through the use of the human capital proxies of educational attainment and literacy rates. They do not seem to account for the presence of the cohort effect. Moreover, I observe that as low income countries grow in per capita income, the relative earnings of their immigrants rise. Finally, I find that exposure to their source country contributes to the presence of stronger cohort effects by studying the children of immigrants.
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Authors: Venkatasubramanian, Deepak
Institution: University of North Carolina
Department: Economics
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Publisher Location: Chapel Hill
Pages: 1-36
Data Collections: IPUMS USA
Topics: Labor Force and Occupational Structure, Migration and Immigration
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