Affiliation:
1. School of Social Work University at Buffalo, State University of New York Buffalo New York USA
2. Leonard Davis School of Gerontology University of Southern California Los Angeles United States USA
3. School of Social Work The University of Alabama Tuscaloosa Alabama USA
Abstract
AbstractThis study examines how racial/ethnic discrimination influences financial access and material hardship, using survey data collected from self‐identified Korean immigrants living in two counties in Alabama (N = 241). Key variables are experiencing racial/ethnic discrimination, two subjective measures of financial access, and four indicators of material hardship (overall, food‐related, health insurance, and medical care). Descriptive analyses show a high rate of experiencing racial/ethnic discrimination, limited access to basic financial services and credit, and considerable rates of material hardship. Regression analyses indicate that experiencing discrimination has a significant association with access to credit but not with access to basic financial services. Access to credit has a significant and negative association with all types of material hardship. Our findings challenge the model minority myth of socially and economically integrated Asian/Korean immigrants. Results call for anti‐discrimination policies and public efforts to expand financial access and reduce material hardship among Korean immigrants.
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,Sociology and Political Science