The Economic Assimilation of Second-Generation Men: An Analysis of Earnings Trajectories Using Administrative Records

Author:

Villarreal Andrés1ORCID,Tamborini Christopher R.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA

2. U.S. Social Security Administration, Washington, DC, USA

Abstract

Abstract Previous research on the economic assimilation of recent U.S.-born children of immigrants who form the new second generation has disproportionately focused on their educational attainment and other early-life outcomes. In this study, we examine the earnings trajectories of second-generation men through a large part of their adult lives using a unique dataset that links respondents from more than two decades of the Current Population Survey to their longitudinal tax records. This longitudinal information allows us to compare the progress second-generation men of different race and ethnicity make in narrowing the earnings gaps with later generations. We consider the extent to which differences in educational attainment and in early occupational placement affect the earnings trajectories of second-generation men. New second-generation men as a whole experience considerable earnings mobility during their lifetimes. However, we also find large differences by race and ethnicity that cannot be fully explained by educational attainment. Second-generation Hispanic men in particular begin their careers with an earnings deficit relative to later-generation White men and fall further behind. Thus, the stalling or reversal in Hispanic economic assimilation appears to begin during the course of the second generation rather than in later generations as previously thought.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

Reference63 articles.

1. Intergenerational mobility of immigrants in the United States over two centuries;Abramitzky;American Economic Review,2021

2. Firms, occupations, and the structure of labor markets;Althauser,1981

3. The educational legacy of unauthorized migration: Comparisons across U.S.-immigrant groups in how parents' status affects their offspring;Bean;International Migration Review,2011

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