Intergenerational Mobility of Immigrants in 15 Destination Countries

  • Leah Boustan
  • , Mathias Fjællegaard Jensen*
  • , Ran Abramitzky
  • , Elisa Jácome
  • , Alan Manning
  • , Santiago Pérez
  • , Analysia Watley
  • , Adrian Adermon
  • , Jaime Arellano-Bover
  • , Olof Åslund
  • , Marie Connolly
  • , Nathan Deutscher
  • , Anne C. Gielen
  • , Yvonne Giesing
  • , Yajna Govind
  • , Martin Halla
  • , Dominik Hangartner
  • , Yuyan Jiang
  • , Cecilia Karmel
  • , Fanny Landaud
  • Lindsey Macmillan, Isabel Z. Martínez, Alberto Polo, Panu Poutvaara, Hillel Rapoport, Sara Roman, Kjell G. Salvanes, Shmuel San, Michael Siegenthaler, Louis Sirugue, Javier Soria Espín, Jan Stuhler, Giovanni L. Violante, Dinand Webbink, Andrea Weber, Jonathan Zhang, Angela Zheng, Tom Zohar
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Working paperResearch

Abstract

We estimate intergenerational mobility of immigrants and their children in fifteen receiving countries. We document large income gaps for first-generation immigrants that diminish in the second generation. Around half of the second-generation gap can be explained by differences in parental income, with the remainder due to differential rates of absolute mobility. The daughters of immigrants enjoy higher absolute mobility than daughters of locals in most destinations, while immigrant sons primarily enjoy this advantage in countries with long histories of immigration. Cross-country differences in absolute mobility are not driven by parental country-of-origin, but instead by destination labor markets and immigration policy.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationBonn
PublisherIZA
Number of pages290
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2025
SeriesIZA Discussion Paper
Number17711
ISSN2365-9793

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities
    SDG 10 Reduced Inequalities

Keywords

  • Intergenerational mobility
  • Immigration

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