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A Nation of Immigrants: Assimilation and Economic Outcomes in the Age of Mass Migration

old style map of migration between world countries

By Minard, Charles Joseph, 1781-1870.

Published Paris : Charles Joseph Minard

(http://www.loc.gov/item/98687134/)

[Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Ran Abramitzky
Leah Platt Boustan
Katherine Eriksson
Journal of Political Economy
2014

Abstract

During the Age of Mass Migration (1850–1913), the United States maintained an open border, absorbing 30 million European immigrants. Prior cross-sectional work finds that immigrants initially held lower-paid occupations than natives but converged over time. In newly assembled panel data, we show that, in fact, the average immigrant did not face a substantial occupation-based earnings penalty upon first arrival and experienced occupational advancement at the same rate as natives. Cross-sectional patterns are driven by biases from declining arrival cohort skill level and departures of negatively selected return migrants. We show that assimilation patterns vary substantially across sending countries and persist in the second generation.

Affiliation: 
Immigration
IRiSS