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Ethnic Enclave Effect Estimation×Immigrant Earnings Assimilation×
TudományterületMigration StudiesMigration Studies
MódszercsaládRegression modelRegression model
Keletkezés éve19891978
MegalkotóAlejandro Portes & Leif JensenBarry R. Chiswick; George J. Borjas
TípusEarnings regression of returns to enclave-economy participationEarnings regression with years-since-migration profiles and cohort correction
AlapműPortes, A., & Jensen, L. (1989). The Enclave and the Entrants: Patterns of Ethnic Enterprise in Miami before and after Mariel. American Sociological Review, 54(6), 929-949. DOI ↗Chiswick, B. R. (1978). The Effect of Americanization on the Earnings of Foreign-Born Men. Journal of Political Economy, 86(5), 897-921. DOI ↗
Alternatív nevekEnclave Economy Wage Effect, Ethnic Economy Returns Estimation, Portes-Jensen Enclave Model, Enclave Participation Effect AnalysisEarnings Assimilation Profile, Years-Since-Migration Earnings Model, Chiswick-Borjas Cohort Method, Immigrant Wage Catch-Up Analysis
Kapcsolódó33
ÖsszefoglalóEthnic enclave effect estimation measures the economic consequences of working within a co-ethnic enclave economy — a spatially concentrated cluster of immigrant-owned firms employing co-ethnic workers — rather than in the open secondary labor market. The framework was forged in the debate launched by Alejandro Portes and Leif Jensen's 1989 study of Miami's Cuban enclave before and after the Mariel boatlift, which asked whether enclave participation rewards immigrants and, crucially, whether it lets them convert their human capital into earnings the way the mainstream economy does. The central empirical object is the coefficient on an enclave-participation indicator in a log-earnings equation, together with the interaction between participation and human capital that reveals whether education and experience pay off inside the enclave. Because immigrants are not randomly sorted into the enclave, selection correction is essential, and how 'enclave' is defined — by residence, by ownership, or by employment in co-ethnic firms — sharply affects the conclusion. Portes and Zhou later folded the enclave into the broader theory of selective acculturation, where co-ethnic economies serve as a mobility ladder. The method remains the standard tool for testing whether ethnic economies trap or uplift their participants.Immigrant earnings assimilation analysis asks how the wages of the foreign-born evolve relative to comparable natives as immigrants spend more years in the host country. Barry Chiswick's 1978 study established the canonical approach: regress log earnings on years since migration and human-capital controls, and interpret the upward years-since-migration profile as evidence that immigrants acquire host-country-specific skills, language, and labor-market knowledge, eventually 'overtaking' similar natives. George Borjas's 1985 critique exposed a deep flaw in reading this from a single cross-section: the positive slope could reflect not within-person growth but a decline in the unobserved quality of successive arrival cohorts, so that earlier, higher-earning immigrants merely make recent arrivals look like they are catching up. Borjas's remedy was to track fixed arrival cohorts across repeated cross-sections — synthetic cohorts — disentangling genuine assimilation from compositional change. The method thus has two layers: a within-survey earnings profile and a cross-survey correction that separates true wage growth from shifts in who is arriving. It remains the foundational empirical framework in the economics of immigration.
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ScholarGateMódszerek összehasonlítása: Ethnic Enclave Effect Estimation · Immigrant Earnings Assimilation. Letöltve 2026-06-25, forrás: https://scholargate.app/hu/compare