Review of Income and Wealth
Volume 62, 2016, Pages S90-S119

Race, Ethnicity, Immigration, and Living Conditions in Costa Rica (Article) (Open Access)

Gradín C.*
  • a Universidade de Vigo and EQUALITAS, Spain

Abstract

Using information from the 2011 census, we analyze the differential in living standards by race, ethnicity, and country of birth in Costa Rica. We identify the main factors explaining such inequalities along the distribution of a composite index of wellbeing, with counterfactual analysis based on the Blinder–Oaxaca type of decomposition. Our results show that mulattoes, indigenous people, and immigrants from Nicaragua and Panama are generally worse off than the majority of the population, although the reasons differ. While lower education levels and lower paying occupations explain much of the differential in all cases, location is particularly important for indigenous people and immigrants from Panama who live in the least developed areas of the country. We also investigate the distributive pattern of these inequalities and the remarkably distinctive situation of Costa Rican blacks. © 2015 International Association for Research in Income and Wealth

Author Keywords

Decomposition Race/ethnicity Costa Rica wellbeing

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84922791382&doi=10.1111%2froiw.12176&partnerID=40&md5=fcb24e8bb9473d15c606041c7602de74

DOI: 10.1111/roiw.12176
ISSN: 00346586
Cited by: 3
Original Language: English