Joseph Ferrie. Jason Long DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS WHEATON COLLEGE ECONOMICS NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY AND NBER

Similar documents
Jason Long DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS WHEATON COLLEGE. Joseph Ferrie NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY AND NBER

Jason Long and Joseph Ferrie DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS COLBY COLLEGE. December 31, Abstract.

A Tale of Two Labor Markets: Intergenerational Occupational Mobility in Britain and the U.S. Since 1850

Intergenerational mobility during South Africa s mineral revolution. Jeanne Cilliers 1 and Johan Fourie 2. RESEP Policy Brief

North and South: Social Mobility and Welfare Spending in Preindustrial England 1

The (South) American Dream: Mobility and Economic Outcomes of First- and Second-Generation. Immigrants in 19th-Century Argentina

Rural-Urban Migration and Socioeconomic Mobility in Victorian Britain

Intergenerational Occupational Mobility Across Three Continents: Were the Americas Exceptional?

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES THE EFFECT OF IMMIGRATION ON NATIVE SELF-EMPLOYMENT. Robert W. Fairlie Bruce D. Meyer

(V) Migration Flows and Policies. Bocconi University,

The (South) American Dream: Mobility and Economic Outcomes of First and Second Generation. Immigrants in 19th-Century Argentina

CHAPTER 2 CHARACTERISTICS OF CYPRIOT MIGRANTS

262 Index. D demand shocks, 146n demographic variables, 103tn

Defining migratory status in the context of the 2030 Agenda

Immigration and the Demographics of the United States

Lecture 22: Causes of Urbanization

Southern (American) Hospitality: Italians in Argentina and the US during the Age of Mass Migration

Population and Migration. Chapters 2 and 3 Test Review

The Wage Effects of Immigration and Emigration

Chapter 9. Labour Mobility. Introduction

International Trade and Migration: A Quantitative Framework

Movers and stayers. Household context and emigration from Western Sweden to America in the 1890s

Gender preference and age at arrival among Asian immigrant women to the US

1. Expand sample to include men who live in the US South (see footnote 16)

The Evolution of Global Bilateral Migration

Southern (American) Hospitality: Italians in Argentina and the US during the Age of Mass Migration

Labor Migration & Social Networks: The Case of Kyrgyzstan

REEXAMINING THE DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH IN 1870

The Language of Opportunity: Canadian Inter-regional and International Migration,

Unit II Migration. Unit II Population and Migration 21

LECTURE 10 Labor Markets. April 1, 2015

Income, Cohort Effects, and Occupational Mobility: A New Look at Immigration to the United States at the Turn of the 20th Century

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES EUROPE'S TIRED, POOR, HUDDLED MASSES: SELF-SELECTION AND ECONOMIC OUTCOMES IN THE AGE OF MASS MIGRATION

The Economic and Political Effects of Black Outmigration from the US South. October, 2017

Settling In: Public Policy and the Labor Market Adjustment of New Immigrants to Australia. Deborah A. Cobb-Clark

WHO MIGRATES? SELECTIVITY IN MIGRATION

Are Canadian immigrant women secondary workers? Alicia Adsera (Princeton University) and Ana Ferrer (University of Waterloo)

Definition of Migratory Status and Migration Data Sources and Indicators in Switzerland


Immigrant Skill Selection and Utilization: A Comparative Analysis for Australia, Canada, and the United States

10. Identify Wilbur Zelinsky s model, and briefly summarize what it says.

Household Inequality and Remittances in Rural Thailand: A Lifecycle Perspective

Volume 35, Issue 1. An examination of the effect of immigration on income inequality: A Gini index approach

Characteristics of the Ethnographic Sample of First- and Second-Generation Latin American Immigrants in the New York to Philadelphia Urban Corridor

Migration and Labor Market Outcomes in Sending and Southern Receiving Countries

People. Population size and growth. Components of population change

Collecting better census data on international migration: UN recommendations

Transformation. Society

Describe the migration patterns for each stage in Zelinsky s model. Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Moving Up the Ladder? The Impact of Migration Experience on Occupational Mobility in Albania

1. A Regional Snapshot

Poverty and Inequality

Economics of Migration. Basic Neoclassical Model. Prof. J.R.Walker Page 1. Economics 623 Spring 2012

Do Recent Latino Immigrants Compete for Jobs with Native Hispanics and Earlier Latino Immigrants?

Labor Market Performance of Immigrants in Early Twentieth-Century America

Item 3.8 Using migration data reported by sending and receiving countries. Other applications

Chapter 8 Migration. 8.1 Definition of Migration

The Curious Dawn of American Public Schools

EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT OF THREE GENERATIONS OF IMMIGRANTS IN CANADA: INITIAL EVIDENCE FROM THE ETHNIC DIVERSITY SURVEY

Transcript for The Great Black Migration and Competition in Northern Labor Markets

Measuring International Skilled Migration: New Estimates Controlling for Age of Entry

Long live your ancestors American dream:

11. Demographic Transition in Rural China:

Female Migration, Human Capital and Fertility

A Longitudinal Analysis of Post-Migration Education

International Migration and the Welfare State. Prof. Panu Poutvaara Ifo Institute and University of Munich

The effects of the collapse of Communism on migrant quality. March 2011

Immigrants earning in Canada: Age at immigration and acculturation

STATEMENT OF PATRICIA A. BUCKLEY, PH.D. SENIOR ECONOMIC ADVISOR U.S

Social Mobility in Ireland in the 1990s: Evidence from the 1994 Living in Ireland Survey

EXAMINATION 3 VERSION B "Wage Structure, Mobility, and Discrimination" April 19, 2018

Intra-Rural Migration and Pathways to Greater Well-Being: Evidence from Tanzania

TECHNICAL APPENDIX. Immigrant Earnings Growth: Selection Bias or Real Progress. Garnett Picot and Patrizio Piraino*

Self-Selection and the Earnings of Immigrants

An Integrated Analysis of Migration and Remittances: Modeling Migration as a Mechanism for Selection 1

Polish citizens working abroad in 2016

IMMIGRATION AND LABOR PRODUCTIVITY. Giovanni Peri UC Davis Jan 22-23, 2015

Population Aging, Immigration and Future Labor Shortage : Myths and Virtual Reality

MIGRATION BETWEEN THE ASIA-PACIFIC AND AUSTRALIA A DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE

Towards a World Bank Group Gender Strategy Consultation Meeting 9 July 2015 Feedback Summary Kingston, Jamaica

Bilateral Migration Model and Data Base. Terrie L. Walmsley

Intra-Rural Migration and Pathways to Greater Well-Being: Evidence from Tanzania

Return Migration and Social Mobility in MENA: Evidence from Labor Market Panel Surveys

INTRODUCTION ANALYSIS

The Big Sort: Selective Migration and the Decline of Northern England,

Land and Racial Wealth Inequality

Econ 133 Global Inequality and Growth. Global inequality and factor mobility. Gabriel Zucman

The migration ^ immigration link in Canada's gateway cities: a comparative study of Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver

Pulled or pushed out? Causes and consequences of youth migration from densely populated areas of rural Kenya

Welcome to the United States: Self-selection of Puerto Rican Migrants

People. Population size and growth

POPULATION STUDIES RESEARCH BRIEF ISSUE Number

Preferences for Redistribution and Economic Mobility Within Generations in the United States and Great Britain,

THE IMPACT OF TAXES ON MIGRATION IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

14.54 International Trade Lecture 23: Factor Mobility (I) Labor Migration

Disaggregating SDG indicators by migratory status. Haoyi Chen United Nations Statistics Division

Estimating Global Migration Flow Tables Using Place of Birth Data

The Quincy copper mine in Hancock, Michigan. The Soudan iron mine in northern Minnesota

Fall : Problem Set Four Solutions

PI + v2.2. Demographic Component of the REMI Model Regional Economic Models, Inc.

Transcription:

British, American, and British American Social Mobility: Intergenerational Occupational Change Among Migrants and Non Migrants in the Late 19th Century Jason Long DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS WHEATON COLLEGE Joseph Ferrie DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY AND NBER

RESEARCH QUESTIONS In previous work (Long & Ferrie 2011; Long & Ferrie 2007) we examine trends in intergenerational social mobility in the U.S. and Britain in the nineteenth century. Key finding: mobility in U.S. in 19 th century significantly greater than in Britain, unlike the present. Along with theoretical results (Piketty 1995, Benabou and Ok 2001, Benabou and Tirole 2006) helps explain durability of myth of exceptional American mobility.

RESEARCH QUESTIONS The present study adds to our comparison of men in Britain and the U.S. the most (geographically) mobile group: trans Atlantic migrants from Britain to the U.S.. We want to know How much intergenerational mobility did this group experience? How did their mobility experience compare with that of non migrants in both countries? What can be said about the selectivity of the migrants?

BACKGROUND The quality of immigrants is usually assessed by examining how they do relative to the native born But this cannot distinguish between change in overall home country quality and change in the selectivity of immigration Focuses exclusively on immigrants experience after arrival in the destination

BACKGROUND A complementary literature focuses on the brain drain : selective immigration s impact on homecountry characteristics Focuses exclusively on migrants experience before departure in the home country and the nonmigrants experience in the home country before and after migrants depart

BACKGROUND Few studies examine the (1) migrants before departure from home and after arrival at destination and (2) non migrants before and after the migrants depart (Abramtizky et al. 2010; Wegge 2002) A different perspective on selectivity But data on both movers & stayers is seldom available

OUR APPROACH Here, we use 2 cohorts of British movers and stayers (1861 1880 & 1881 1900), observing (1) migrants before & after departure and (2) nonmigrants before & after the migrants left We account for selection explicitly We provide the first measurement of intergenerational mobility for one of the largest groups of migrants to the U.S.

THE CONTEXT Migration was completely unrestricted at this time (before the Quota System of the 1920s) Driven not by desperation (c.f. Irish Famine migrants) but by normal forces (e.g. relative wages) The British were a large fraction of the migrant stream (close to 40% in some years), but their share moved opposite the total volume of migration

THE CONTEXT The Britain each cohort left behind was a decade or more ahead of the U.S. in its industrialization More opportunity in the U.S. for those squeezed out by changes (consolidation in farming, displacement of craft workers by factories and machines)

THE DATA Previously, we created samples of males linked across censuses from 1861 1881 & 1881 1901 in Britain, and males linked from 1860 1880 & 1880 1900 in the U.S. Linkage based on (i) name, (ii) year of birth, (iii) parish & county (Britain) or state (U.S.) of birth. Individuals were 30 39 years old in the terminal year and were observed with their fathers in the initial year. Fathers & sons occupations observed at same lifecycle point.

THE DATA For comparable data on migrants from Britain to the U.S., we generated 2 new samples British born males age 30 39 in the 1880 U.S. Census of Population linked back to the 1861 British Census British born males age 30 39 in the 1900 U.S. Census of Population linked back to the 1881 British Census

THE DATA Main challenge: Lack of specific birthplace info for migrants in U.S. censuses Requirements/Checks (1880 1861): Unique record (name, age birthplace) in 1880 U.S. census and 1861 Br census Not present in British 1881 census Not present in U.S. 1860 census index If they were present in the 1870 U.S. census index, they were not also present in the 1871 British census index, and if they were present in the 1871 British census index, they were not also present in the 1870 U.S. census index. Oldest U.S. born child in 1880 was born after 1860 Youngest Britain born child in 1880 was born before 1862

Abel Dellbridge, b. 1844-45, miner, born in England 1880 U.S. Census of Population, Nevada City, California

Abel Dellbridge, b. 1844-45, father: miner, born in Liskeard, Cornwall, England 1861 Census of England, St. Ive, Cornwall

THE DATA U.S. samples: British samples: Migrant samples: 4,138 (1860 1880) & 3,919 (1880 1900) 2,039 (1861 1881) & 4,071 (1881 1901) 1,176* (1861 1880) & 1,144 (1881 1900) Four occupation categories: White Collar, Farmer, Skilled & Semiskilled, and Unskilled * 2,174 linked; remainder awaiting occupational transcription

MEASURING INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY The conventional approach: ln Y i Son = β ln Y i Father + ε i where β = intergenerational income elasticity But we ve only got occupations, and they re difficult to order unambiguously

MEASURING INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY

MEASURING INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY M P = 3/8 M Q = 7/10 M P = 3/8 M Q / = 5/8

MEASURING INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY Cross Product Ratios: (3 x 2) / (2 x 1) = 3 for P (2 x 1) / (6 x 1) = 1/3 for Q

MEASURING INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY Cross Product Ratio for Q = ratio for Q' = 1/3

MEASURING INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY For tables > 2 2, use the Altham statistic, which uses all of the cross product ratios: Measures distance between mobility in P and mobility in Q

MEASURING INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY The Plan: For each country/year (e.g. U.S. 1860 80) group occupations into 4 categories (white collar, skilled, farmer, laborer) Measure fraction off main diagonal with actual marginal frequencies (M) Measure fraction off main diagonal with the marginal frequencies from the other table in the comparison (M )

MEASURING INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY Calculate the Altham statistic d(p,j) comparing that 4 4 table to independence, a matrix J of ones: higher d(p,j) farther from independence less intergenerational mobility For country/year pairs (e.g. U.S. 1860 80 & Britain 1861 81) calculate the Altham statistic d(p,q) to compare the difference in mobility

BRITISH MIGRANTS VS NON MIGRANTS Migrants were more mobile at both the top (White Collar) and the bottom (Unskilled) Non migrants ( stayers ) Migrants ( movers )

MOBILITY MEASURES

VISUALIZING MOBILITY DIFFERENCES

STRUCTURAL MODEL: SWITCHING ORDERED PROBIT We ve been descriptive up to now, so to move to causation, we need to consider selectivity: Where y is occupational class, now ordered: White Collar > Farmer > Skilled & Semiskilled > Unskilled and M = 1 if migrant, 0 if non migrant

SWITCHING ORDERED PROBIT Selection and Treatment Effect parameters:

SWITCHING ORDERED PROBIT

SWITCHING ORDERED PROBIT

CONCLUSIONS Earliest migrants more mobile than both British non migrants and U.S. native born Later migrants still more mobile than British nonmigrants (though gap is smaller) and just as mobile as U.S. native born Strong positive selection among migrants Puzzling result: migration was less likely among those anticipating more improvement

CONCLUSIONS Extensions: 1.use country specific and time specific occupation incomes instead of categories 2.estimate selectivity for first cohort 3.examine other outcomes (land ownership) and types of movers (tied vs. independent)

THE CONTEXT

THE CONTEXT

BRITISH MIGRANTS VS NON MIGRANTS True whether we look at actual or standardized marginal distributions