Hispanic Immigrant Poverty: Does Ethnic Origin Matter?

被引:0
作者
Dennis H. Sullivan
Andrea L. Ziegert
机构
[1] Miami University,Department of Economics
[2] Denison University,Department of Economics
来源
Population Research and Policy Review | 2008年 / 27卷
关键词
Ethnicity; Immigration; Poverty;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Hispanic immigrant poverty is nearly double that of other immigrants. Furthermore, poverty rates among Hispanic families differ substantially by ethnicity. This paper analyzes poverty rates for Hispanic and non-Hispanic immigrants, and also for individual Hispanic ethnic groups, to determine the relative importance of different covariates of poverty. The general conclusion is that low levels of education and fluency in English contribute to high Hispanic poverty rates and are also contributing factors to differences in poverty among Hispanic ethnic groups. In particular, the high poverty rate of Mexican immigrant households is associated with the low educational attainments of household heads, along with a relatively large number of children, relatively low English fluency and a relatively short tenure in the U.S. Immigrants from Guatemala and El Salvador have substantially lower poverty rates than Mexican immigrants despite a similar constellation of observable traits. Immigrants from South America have low poverty rates, largely due to strong family work effort and high educational attainments. The relatively low family work effort and high incidence of single parent families among Puerto Ricans overpowers the beneficial effects of higher rates of citizenship and English fluency.
引用
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页码:667 / 687
页数:20
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