Human Capital and Interethnic Marriage Decisions
59 Pages Posted: 2 Mar 2006
Date Written: February 2006
Abstract
Despite a longstanding belief that education importantly affects the process of immigrant assimilation, little is known about the relative importance of different mechanisms linking these two processes. This paper explores this issue through an examination of the effects of human capital on one dimension of assimilation, immigrant intermarriage. I argue that there are three primary mechanisms through which human capital affects the probability of intermarriage. First, human capital may make immigrants better able to adapt to the native culture thereby making it easier to share a household with a native. Second, it may raise the likelihood that immigrants leave ethnic enclaves, thereby decreasing the opportunity to meet potential spouses of the same ethnicity. Finally, assortative matching on education in the marriage market suggests that immigrants may be willing to trade similarities in ethnicity for similarities in education when evaluating potential spouses. Using a simple spouse-search model, I first derive an identification strategy for differentiating the cultural adaptability effect from the assortative matching effect, and then I obtain empirical estimates of their relative importance while controlling for the enclave effect. Using U.S. Census data, I find that assortative matching on education is the most important avenue through which human capital affects the probability of intermarriage. Further support for the model is provided by deriving and testing some of its additional implications.
Keywords: interethnic marriage, human capital, second-generation immigrants
JEL Classification: J12, I21, J15
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Intermarriage, Language, and Economic Assimilation Process: A Case Study of France
By Xin Meng and Dominique Meurs
-
Interethnic Marriages and Economic Assimilation of Immigrants
-
Gender and Assimilation Among Mexican Americans
By Francine D. Blau and Lawrence M. Kahn
-
Ethnic Identification, Intermarriage, and Unmeasured Progress by Mexican Americans
By Brian Duncan and Stephen J. Trejo
-
Ethnic Identification, Intermarriage, and Unmeasured Progress by Mexican Americans
By Brian Duncan and Stephen J. Trejo
-
Intergenerational Progress of Mexican-Origin Workers in the U.S. Labor Market
-
Ethnic Intermarriage Among Immigrants: Human Capital and Assortative Mating
-
By Brian Duncan and Stephen J. Trejo
-
Age at Immigration and Educational Attainment of Young Immigrants
By Jan C. Van Ours and Justus Veenman