Author Topic: More Evidence on Third-Generation Outcomes  (Read 203 times)

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rangerrebew

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More Evidence on Third-Generation Outcomes
« on: May 28, 2019, 02:55:51 pm »
More Evidence on Third-Generation Outcomes

Grandchildren of Mexican immigrants compared to grandchildren of European immigrants

By Jason Richwine on May 28, 2019

Will the children and grandchildren of low-skill immigrants eventually rise to the same socioeconomic level as natives? In a report published last fall, I investigated this question using the NLSY-97, a survey of people born between 1980 and 1984 that includes their grandparents' places of birth. The grandparent information helps identify a true "third generation," meaning U.S.-born people who have two U.S.-born parents but at least one foreign-born grandparent.

Because the largest and most consistently low-skill immigrant group has come from Mexico, my report compared the grandchildren of Mexican immigrants to a reference group of white Americans from the "fourth-plus generation" – meaning U.S. born with two U.S.-born parents and four U.S.-born grandparents. The results indicated that Americans with at least one Mexican-born grandparent lag significantly behind on measures of education and income. In other words, assimilation of this initially low-skill group is still not complete by the third generation.

https://cis.org/Richwine/More-Evidence-ThirdGeneration-Outcomes

Offline Fishrrman

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Re: More Evidence on Third-Generation Outcomes
« Reply #1 on: May 28, 2019, 11:53:53 pm »
Doesn't look good for the future.

Who are the fools who would tell us that you can bring people from anywhere into America and make them into "Americans" that will be the equal of those who founded and populated this land into the 1960's...?