Dynamics of Employment- and Earnings-Assimilation of First-Generation Immigrant Men in Sweden, 1990-2000
Abstract
The employment- and earnings-assimilation of first-generation immigrant men
in Sweden was estimated using a dynamic random-e¤ects sample-selection model
with eleven waves of unbalanced panel-data during 1990-2000. Endogenous initial values were controlled for using the simple Wooldridge method. Local market
unemployment-rates were used as a proxy in order to control for the effect of changing macroeconomic conditions. Significant structural (true) state-dependence was
found both on the employment-probabilities and on the earnings of both immigrants
and native Swedes. The size of structural state-dependence differed between immigrants and Swedes. Failure to control for the structural state-dependence could have
caused bias not only in the assimilation measures but also in the cohort-effects.
For example, standard (classic) assimilation model seriously overestimates short-run marginal assimilation-rates and underestimates long-run marginal assimilation-
rates. The model controlling for structural state-dependence shows that the earnings of all immigrants in Sweden (except Iraqies) eventually converge to those of
native Swedes, but only Nordics and Westerners are able to reach the employment-
probability of native Swedes.
University
Göteborg University. School of Business, Economics and Law
Institution
Department of Economics
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2007-12-05Author
Akay, Alpaslan
Keywords
Dynamic random-e¤ects sample-selection model
employment and earnings assimilation
initial values problem
wage-curve method
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
279
Language
eng