Future of Children
Volume 16, Issue 2, 2006, Pages 55-71

Making it in America: Social mobility in the immigrant population (Review)

Borjas G.J.*
  • a Department of Economics and Social Policy, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, United States, National Bureau of Economic Research, United States

Abstract

In his survey of research on social mobility and U.S. immigration, George Borjas underscores two insights. First, most immigrants are at a sizable earnings disadvantage, relative to native-born workers. Second, the earnings of different groups of immigrants vary widely. The children of immigrants "catch up" to native-born workers slowly. The jump in relative wages between the first and second generations is somewhere between 5 and 10 percentage points. Of particular concern is that the age-adjusted relative wage of both immigrants and second-generation workers has been falling - a trend with bleak implications for the children of immigrants. The wide ethnic variation in the earnings of immigrants has equally important implications. National origin groups from advanced economies, such as Canada, do much better in the U.S. labor market than those from poorer countries, such as Mexico. And the initial ethnic differences tend to persist. In rough terms, about half of the difference in relative economic status persists from one generation to the next. Thus a 20 percentage point wage gap among ethnic groups in the immigrant generation implies a 10 point gap among second-generation groups and a 5 point gap among third-generation groups. Again in rough terms, Borjas attributes about half of that persistence to the ethnic environment in which children are raised. Borjas cautions that the rate of social mobility that immigrants enjoyed over much of the twentieth century may not continue in the future. The employment sectors seeking immigrants today are unlikely to provide the same growth opportunities as did the rapidly expanding manufacturing sector a century ago. And in contrast to the many and diverse ethnic groups that made up early twentieth-century immigrants, the large ethnic groups of immigrants today may develop separate economies and social structures, in effect hindering their social mobility.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

cultural anthropology Cultural Diversity immigrant depression developing country human Ethnic Groups ethnic group social structure financial management social mobility achievement United States Humans economic development Socioeconomic Factors Review socioeconomics population research developed country Emigration and Immigration social class

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-33748942480&doi=10.1353%2ffoc.2006.0013&partnerID=40&md5=b272df2cef778bce7c0b275d0c1c322c

DOI: 10.1353/foc.2006.0013
ISSN: 10548289
Cited by: 51
Original Language: English