This study examines labor market assimilation by measuring the information utilized by immigrants during job search. Assimilation is assumed to occur whenever such information increases with length of residence in the United States (and repeated job searches). We assert that information utilized during job search reduces differentials between actual and potential (maximum attainable) earnings. The results indicate that male immigrants perform quite well within the U.S. labor force by garnering 71% of their potential earnings whereas non-immigrants reap 73.2% of their potential earnings. However, this result is not uniform across all immigrant workers but instead varies on the basis of ethnicity
The labor market behavior of immigrants is studied in relation to the propensity to outmigrate. Util...
Studies on the earnings assimilation of immigrants have traditionally focused exclusively on immigra...
This paper examines and measures the extent of wage convergence of immigrants to native-born workers...
Studies on the earnings assimilation of immigrants have traditionally focused exclusively on immigra...
This paper uses data from the 1980 and 1990 U.S. Censuses to study labor market assimilation of self...
This study uses the concept of stochastic frontiers for testing the assimilation hypothesis in the W...
For years, corporations in the United States have criticized the native workforce for not having eno...
In this dissertation, I examine immigrants’ integration into host societies by examining systematic ...
In this paper, we analyze immigrant wage gaps and propose an extension of the traditional wage decom...
Immigrants to the United States earn lower wages than native workers, and this gap decreases with ti...
1Eckstein and Weiss (1997) use panel data on immigrants to Israel from the former Soviet Union to qu...
We provide evidence on wage profiles of immigrants using CPS data from 1979 to 2001, taking into acc...
This work uses the New Immigrant Survey Pilot data to focus on the process of immigrants\u27 labor m...
We estimate models of employment an earnings for a sample of white and non-white male immigrants dra...
We analyze how the formal recognition of foreign qualifications affects immigrants’ labor market out...
The labor market behavior of immigrants is studied in relation to the propensity to outmigrate. Util...
Studies on the earnings assimilation of immigrants have traditionally focused exclusively on immigra...
This paper examines and measures the extent of wage convergence of immigrants to native-born workers...
Studies on the earnings assimilation of immigrants have traditionally focused exclusively on immigra...
This paper uses data from the 1980 and 1990 U.S. Censuses to study labor market assimilation of self...
This study uses the concept of stochastic frontiers for testing the assimilation hypothesis in the W...
For years, corporations in the United States have criticized the native workforce for not having eno...
In this dissertation, I examine immigrants’ integration into host societies by examining systematic ...
In this paper, we analyze immigrant wage gaps and propose an extension of the traditional wage decom...
Immigrants to the United States earn lower wages than native workers, and this gap decreases with ti...
1Eckstein and Weiss (1997) use panel data on immigrants to Israel from the former Soviet Union to qu...
We provide evidence on wage profiles of immigrants using CPS data from 1979 to 2001, taking into acc...
This work uses the New Immigrant Survey Pilot data to focus on the process of immigrants\u27 labor m...
We estimate models of employment an earnings for a sample of white and non-white male immigrants dra...
We analyze how the formal recognition of foreign qualifications affects immigrants’ labor market out...
The labor market behavior of immigrants is studied in relation to the propensity to outmigrate. Util...
Studies on the earnings assimilation of immigrants have traditionally focused exclusively on immigra...
This paper examines and measures the extent of wage convergence of immigrants to native-born workers...