The not-so-hot melting pot: The persistence of outcomes for descendants of the age of mass migration
By: Ward, Zachary
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BookPublisher: American Economic Journal: Applied Economics Description: 12(4), Oct, 2020: p.73-102.Subject(s): Economic gaps, Immigrants, Occupational income| Item type | Current location | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Indian Institute of Public Administration | 12(4), Oct, 2020: p.73-102 | Available | AR124432 |
How persistent are economic gaps across ethnicities? The convergence of ethnic gaps through the third generation of immigrants is difficult to measure because few datasets include grandparental birthplace. I overcome this limitation with a new three-generational dataset that links immigrant grandfathers in 1880 to their grandsons in 1940. I find that the persistence of ethnic gaps in occupational income is 2.5 times stronger than predicted by a standard grandfather-grandson elasticity. While part of the discrepancy is due to measurement error attenuating the grandfather-grandson elasticity, mechanisms related to geography also partially explain the stronger persistence of ethnic occupational differentials. – Reproduced


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