The immigrant-native gap in risk and time preferences in Germany: levels, socio-economic determinants, and recent changes

被引:2
作者
Deole, Sumit S. [1 ]
Rieger, Marc Oliver [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Trier, D-54296 Trier, Germany
[2] Univ Trier, Univ ring 15, D-54296 Trier, Germany
关键词
Risk aversion; Time discounting; Immigration; Assimilation; UNITED-STATES; ATTITUDES; AVERSION; MIGRATION; MIGRANTS; BENEFITS; EARNINGS; SEARCH; HEALTH;
D O I
10.1007/s00148-022-00925-x
中图分类号
C921 [人口统计学];
学科分类号
摘要
We present new descriptive evidence on the immigrant-native gap in risk and time preferences in Germany, one of immigrants' most preferred destination countries. Using the recent waves of the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) dataset, we find that the immigrant-native gap in risk preferences has widened for recent immigration cohorts, especially around the time of the 2015 European Refugee Crisis. We attribute the recent widening to decreased assimilation rates of new immigrants caused by reduced integration due to sudden increases in immigrants flows from culturally diverse parts of the world, particularly around the year 2015. We also find that the immigrant-native gap varies across different migrant groups: "Opportunity seekers," which we define as economic immigrants who intend to stay in Germany only temporarily, are very similar in their risk preferences to natives. Other immigrants, however, are substantially more risk averse than natives. A smaller gap in risk preferences is also found among migrants who are female, highly educated, proficient in the host language, self-employed, and working in predominantly high-skilled jobs. Concerning time preferences, a noticeably large immigrant-native gap is evident, but the gap does not vary across most individual-level socio-economic variables.
引用
收藏
页码:743 / 778
页数:36
相关论文
共 56 条
  • [1] Risk attitudes and migration
    Akguec, Mehtap
    Liu, Xingfei
    Tani, Massimiliano
    Zimmermann, Klaus F.
    [J]. CHINA ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2016, 37 : 166 - 176
  • [2] Albanese G., 2017, INT REV EC, V64, P367, DOI [10.1007/s12232-017-0282-7, DOI 10.1007/S12232-017-0282-7]
  • [3] THE ECONOMIC SITUATION OF FIRST AND SECOND-GENERATION IMMIGRANTS IN FRANCE, GERMANY AND THE UNITED KINGDOM
    Algan, Yann
    Dustmann, Christian
    Glitz, Albrecht
    Manning, Alan
    [J]. ECONOMIC JOURNAL, 2010, 120 (542) : F4 - F30
  • [4] Anderhub V., 2001, Ger. Econ. Rev., V2, P239, DOI DOI 10.1111/1468-0475.00036
  • [5] BAMF, 2016, MIGR 2015
  • [6] Migration, risk attitudes, and entrepreneurship: evidence from a representative immigrant survey
    Batista, Catia
    Umblijs, Janis
    [J]. IZA JOURNAL OF MIGRATION, 2014, 3
  • [7] Do migrants send remittances as a way of self-insurance?
    Batista, Catia
    Umblijs, Janis
    [J]. OXFORD ECONOMIC PAPERS-NEW SERIES, 2016, 68 (01): : 108 - 130
  • [8] Migration, ethnic concentration and firm entry: evidence from Italian regions
    Bettin, Giulia
    Bianchi, Patrizio
    Nicolli, Francesco
    Ramaciotti, Laura
    Rizzo, Ugo
    [J]. REGIONAL STUDIES, 2019, 53 (01) : 55 - 66
  • [9] BMI, 2016, 890000 AS JAHR 2015
  • [10] Cross-sectional earnings risk and occupational sorting: The role of risk attitudes
    Bonin, Holger
    Dohmen, Thomas
    Falk, Airmin
    Huffman, David
    Sunde, Uwe
    [J]. LABOUR ECONOMICS, 2007, 14 (06) : 926 - 937