The Effects of Ethnic Capital and Age of Arrival on the Standard of Living of Young Immigrants

Michael C. Seeborg, Jeremy Sandford

Research output: Journal ArticleArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper uses a sample of 30 year old male immigrants from the 1990 Census PUMS data to explore the effects that age of arrival and ethnic capital have on the standard of living of immigrants. It finds that both time of arrival and ethnic capital effect immigrants’ standard of living through a set of interaction effects and indirect effects. In particular, immigrants who arrive as children enjoy greater returns to human capital investments than immigrants who arrive as young adults. Moreover, immigrants who arrive as children are affected less than young adult immigrants by the ethnic capital of the group that they join in the United States. Further, age of arrival and ethnic capital are found to have indirect effects on immigrants’ standard of living through their influence on educational attainment and language proficiency. (J15, J61)

Original languageAmerican English
JournalThe Journal of Economics
Volume29
StatePublished - 2003

Disciplines

  • Economics

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