Human Capital Investment: A History of Asian Immigrants and Their Family Ties
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cham
Springer International Publishing AG
2021
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Schlagworte: | |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (275 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9783030470838 |
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100 | 1 | |a Duleep, Harriet |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Human Capital Investment |b A History of Asian Immigrants and Their Family Ties |
264 | 1 | |a Cham |b Springer International Publishing AG |c 2021 | |
264 | 4 | |c ©2020 | |
300 | |a 1 Online-Ressource (275 Seiten) | ||
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505 | 8 | |a Intro -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Background and Overview -- Human Capital -- The Changing Nature of Immigration, Immigration Policy, and Immigration Research -- Changes in Immigration Research -- The Time Periods and Groups That Are Studied -- References -- Chapter 2: A Brief Review of Immigration from Asia -- References -- Part I: Theory and Methodology -- Chapter 3: What Caused the Decline in Immigrant Entry Earnings Following the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965? -- The Income-Distribution/Immigrant-Ability Hypothesis -- The Economic-Development/Skills-Transferability Hypothesis -- Level of Economic Development and Immigrant Skill Transferability -- References -- Chapter 4: The Immigrant Human Capital Investment Model -- The Effect of Education and Age on the Propensity to Invest in Human Capital -- The Importance of Permanence -- Economic Implications of the IHCI Model -- Measuring Skill Transferability -- Concluding Remark -- References -- Chapter 5: Methodological Implications of a Human Capital Investment Perspective -- Constraints on the Relationship Between Entry Earnings and Earnings Growth -- Constraints on the Sample -- Biases Created by Sample Constraints -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Part II: Earnings Growth and Human Capital Investment of Immigrant Men, the 1965-1970 and 1975-1980 Cohorts -- Chapter 6: The Earnings Growth of Asian Versus European Immigrants -- The Inverse Relationship: Asian and European Immigrants -- The Fixed-Cohort-Effect Model Revisited -- References -- Chapter 7: The Earnings Profiles of Immigrant Men in Specific Asian Groups: Cross-Sectional Versus Cohort-Based Estimates -- Initial Earnings -- Within-Country Changes in Entry Earnings -- Earnings Growth | |
505 | 8 | |a Cohort-Based Estimates of Immigrant Earnings Growth -- Why Are the Cross-Sectional and Cohort-Based Estimates of Earnings Growth So Similar? -- References -- Chapter 8: Modeling the Effect of a Factor Associated with Low Entry Earnings: Family Admissions and Immigrant Earnings Profiles -- Patterns of Admission -- Measuring the Effect of Admission Criteria on Immigrant Earnings -- Education and the Earnings' Effect of Admission Criteria -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 9: Human Capital Investment -- Investment in English Proficiency -- Occupational Change with Time in the United States -- Investment in Schooling -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 10: Permanence and the Propensity to Invest -- Japanese Immigrants and Permanence -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Part III: A Family Perspective -- References -- Chapter 11: Family Income -- Determinants of Family Income -- The Contributions of Immigrant Women -- References -- Chapter 12: Explaining the High Labor Force Participation of Married Women from Asian Developing Countries -- Other Explanations -- Marriage Before or After Migration -- Relatives in the Home -- Cultural Factors -- Family Income -- Permanence -- References -- Chapter 13: Husbands and Wives: Work Decisions in a Family Investment Model? -- Immigrant Women's Propensity to Work and the Family Investment Return -- Chapter 14: Following Cohorts and Individuals Over Time: Work Decisions of Married Immigrant Women -- Analyzing the Decision to Work by Following Cohorts -- Marital Status and Following Cohorts -- Using Census Data to Follow the Propensity to Work of Individuals Over Time -- Insights on Hours of Work and Wages Following Cohorts -- Hours of Work the First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- Wages the First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- Concluding Remarks -- References | |
505 | 8 | |a Chapter 15: Unpaid Family Labor -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 16: Beyond the Immediate Family -- The Extended Family and Immigrant Self Employment -- References -- Part IV: More Recent Cohorts -- References -- Chapter 17: Entry Earnings, Earnings Growth, and Human Capital Investment: The 1985-1990 and 1995-2000 Cohorts -- China Disaggregated -- Are the Earnings Patterns We Observe Due to Anti-Asian Discrimination? -- References -- Part V: The Impact of Refugee Status -- References -- Chapter 18: Factors Associated with Refugee Status -- Community Ties and Extended Family -- Selection on Observed and Unobserved Characteristics -- Skill Transferability -- Permanence -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 19: The Earnings and Human Capital Investment of Southeast Asian Refugee Men: The 1975-1980 Cohort -- Investment in U.S. Human Capital -- English Proficiency -- Investment in Education -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 20: Married Refugee Women from South East Asia: The 1975-1980 Cohort -- Modeling the Propensity of South East Asian Women to Work -- Hours of Work: The First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- The Earnings of South East Asian Married Women: The First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- The Wages of Working South East Asian Married Immigrant Women: The First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- Concluding Remarks -- Chapter 21: Refugee Entrants from South East Asia, a Decade After the War: The 1985-1990 Cohort -- The Entry Characteristics of the 1975-1980 and 1985-1990 Cohorts -- Entry Earnings and Earnings Growth -- Human Capital Investment Patterns -- Concluding Remark -- Reference -- Part VI: A Brief Glance Backward and Conclusion -- Chapter 22: A Longer Perspective on Initial Conditions and Immigrant Adjustment -- The First Wave of Asian Immigration: Entry Characteristics -- Their Descendants | |
505 | 8 | |a References -- Chapter 23: Conclusion -- The Immigrant Human Capital Investment Model -- The Importance of Being Permanent -- Policy Implications of Our Results -- References -- Appendix A: Sample Size Information for Year-of-Entry Cohorts at Entry and Ten Years Later by Age and Education Categories -- Appendix B: Notes on Historical Data in Chap. 22 -- Statistics on Filipino Immigrants Before 1935 -- Index | |
650 | 4 | |a Human capital-United States | |
653 | 6 | |a Electronic books | |
700 | 1 | |a Regets, Mark C. |e Sonstige |4 oth | |
700 | 1 | |a Sanders, Seth |e Sonstige |4 oth | |
700 | 1 | |a Wunnava, Phanindra V. |e Sonstige |4 oth | |
776 | 0 | 8 | |i Erscheint auch als |n Druck-Ausgabe |a Duleep, Harriet |t Human Capital Investment |d Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2021 |z 9783030470821 |
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author | Duleep, Harriet |
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contents | Intro -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Background and Overview -- Human Capital -- The Changing Nature of Immigration, Immigration Policy, and Immigration Research -- Changes in Immigration Research -- The Time Periods and Groups That Are Studied -- References -- Chapter 2: A Brief Review of Immigration from Asia -- References -- Part I: Theory and Methodology -- Chapter 3: What Caused the Decline in Immigrant Entry Earnings Following the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965? -- The Income-Distribution/Immigrant-Ability Hypothesis -- The Economic-Development/Skills-Transferability Hypothesis -- Level of Economic Development and Immigrant Skill Transferability -- References -- Chapter 4: The Immigrant Human Capital Investment Model -- The Effect of Education and Age on the Propensity to Invest in Human Capital -- The Importance of Permanence -- Economic Implications of the IHCI Model -- Measuring Skill Transferability -- Concluding Remark -- References -- Chapter 5: Methodological Implications of a Human Capital Investment Perspective -- Constraints on the Relationship Between Entry Earnings and Earnings Growth -- Constraints on the Sample -- Biases Created by Sample Constraints -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Part II: Earnings Growth and Human Capital Investment of Immigrant Men, the 1965-1970 and 1975-1980 Cohorts -- Chapter 6: The Earnings Growth of Asian Versus European Immigrants -- The Inverse Relationship: Asian and European Immigrants -- The Fixed-Cohort-Effect Model Revisited -- References -- Chapter 7: The Earnings Profiles of Immigrant Men in Specific Asian Groups: Cross-Sectional Versus Cohort-Based Estimates -- Initial Earnings -- Within-Country Changes in Entry Earnings -- Earnings Growth Cohort-Based Estimates of Immigrant Earnings Growth -- Why Are the Cross-Sectional and Cohort-Based Estimates of Earnings Growth So Similar? -- References -- Chapter 8: Modeling the Effect of a Factor Associated with Low Entry Earnings: Family Admissions and Immigrant Earnings Profiles -- Patterns of Admission -- Measuring the Effect of Admission Criteria on Immigrant Earnings -- Education and the Earnings' Effect of Admission Criteria -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 9: Human Capital Investment -- Investment in English Proficiency -- Occupational Change with Time in the United States -- Investment in Schooling -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 10: Permanence and the Propensity to Invest -- Japanese Immigrants and Permanence -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Part III: A Family Perspective -- References -- Chapter 11: Family Income -- Determinants of Family Income -- The Contributions of Immigrant Women -- References -- Chapter 12: Explaining the High Labor Force Participation of Married Women from Asian Developing Countries -- Other Explanations -- Marriage Before or After Migration -- Relatives in the Home -- Cultural Factors -- Family Income -- Permanence -- References -- Chapter 13: Husbands and Wives: Work Decisions in a Family Investment Model? -- Immigrant Women's Propensity to Work and the Family Investment Return -- Chapter 14: Following Cohorts and Individuals Over Time: Work Decisions of Married Immigrant Women -- Analyzing the Decision to Work by Following Cohorts -- Marital Status and Following Cohorts -- Using Census Data to Follow the Propensity to Work of Individuals Over Time -- Insights on Hours of Work and Wages Following Cohorts -- Hours of Work the First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- Wages the First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- Concluding Remarks -- References Chapter 15: Unpaid Family Labor -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 16: Beyond the Immediate Family -- The Extended Family and Immigrant Self Employment -- References -- Part IV: More Recent Cohorts -- References -- Chapter 17: Entry Earnings, Earnings Growth, and Human Capital Investment: The 1985-1990 and 1995-2000 Cohorts -- China Disaggregated -- Are the Earnings Patterns We Observe Due to Anti-Asian Discrimination? -- References -- Part V: The Impact of Refugee Status -- References -- Chapter 18: Factors Associated with Refugee Status -- Community Ties and Extended Family -- Selection on Observed and Unobserved Characteristics -- Skill Transferability -- Permanence -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 19: The Earnings and Human Capital Investment of Southeast Asian Refugee Men: The 1975-1980 Cohort -- Investment in U.S. Human Capital -- English Proficiency -- Investment in Education -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 20: Married Refugee Women from South East Asia: The 1975-1980 Cohort -- Modeling the Propensity of South East Asian Women to Work -- Hours of Work: The First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- The Earnings of South East Asian Married Women: The First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- The Wages of Working South East Asian Married Immigrant Women: The First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- Concluding Remarks -- Chapter 21: Refugee Entrants from South East Asia, a Decade After the War: The 1985-1990 Cohort -- The Entry Characteristics of the 1975-1980 and 1985-1990 Cohorts -- Entry Earnings and Earnings Growth -- Human Capital Investment Patterns -- Concluding Remark -- Reference -- Part VI: A Brief Glance Backward and Conclusion -- Chapter 22: A Longer Perspective on Initial Conditions and Immigrant Adjustment -- The First Wave of Asian Immigration: Entry Characteristics -- Their Descendants References -- Chapter 23: Conclusion -- The Immigrant Human Capital Investment Model -- The Importance of Being Permanent -- Policy Implications of Our Results -- References -- Appendix A: Sample Size Information for Year-of-Entry Cohorts at Entry and Ten Years Later by Age and Education Categories -- Appendix B: Notes on Historical Data in Chap. 22 -- Statistics on Filipino Immigrants Before 1935 -- Index |
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spelling | Duleep, Harriet Verfasser aut Human Capital Investment A History of Asian Immigrants and Their Family Ties Cham Springer International Publishing AG 2021 ©2020 1 Online-Ressource (275 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Intro -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Background and Overview -- Human Capital -- The Changing Nature of Immigration, Immigration Policy, and Immigration Research -- Changes in Immigration Research -- The Time Periods and Groups That Are Studied -- References -- Chapter 2: A Brief Review of Immigration from Asia -- References -- Part I: Theory and Methodology -- Chapter 3: What Caused the Decline in Immigrant Entry Earnings Following the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965? -- The Income-Distribution/Immigrant-Ability Hypothesis -- The Economic-Development/Skills-Transferability Hypothesis -- Level of Economic Development and Immigrant Skill Transferability -- References -- Chapter 4: The Immigrant Human Capital Investment Model -- The Effect of Education and Age on the Propensity to Invest in Human Capital -- The Importance of Permanence -- Economic Implications of the IHCI Model -- Measuring Skill Transferability -- Concluding Remark -- References -- Chapter 5: Methodological Implications of a Human Capital Investment Perspective -- Constraints on the Relationship Between Entry Earnings and Earnings Growth -- Constraints on the Sample -- Biases Created by Sample Constraints -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Part II: Earnings Growth and Human Capital Investment of Immigrant Men, the 1965-1970 and 1975-1980 Cohorts -- Chapter 6: The Earnings Growth of Asian Versus European Immigrants -- The Inverse Relationship: Asian and European Immigrants -- The Fixed-Cohort-Effect Model Revisited -- References -- Chapter 7: The Earnings Profiles of Immigrant Men in Specific Asian Groups: Cross-Sectional Versus Cohort-Based Estimates -- Initial Earnings -- Within-Country Changes in Entry Earnings -- Earnings Growth Cohort-Based Estimates of Immigrant Earnings Growth -- Why Are the Cross-Sectional and Cohort-Based Estimates of Earnings Growth So Similar? -- References -- Chapter 8: Modeling the Effect of a Factor Associated with Low Entry Earnings: Family Admissions and Immigrant Earnings Profiles -- Patterns of Admission -- Measuring the Effect of Admission Criteria on Immigrant Earnings -- Education and the Earnings' Effect of Admission Criteria -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 9: Human Capital Investment -- Investment in English Proficiency -- Occupational Change with Time in the United States -- Investment in Schooling -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 10: Permanence and the Propensity to Invest -- Japanese Immigrants and Permanence -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Part III: A Family Perspective -- References -- Chapter 11: Family Income -- Determinants of Family Income -- The Contributions of Immigrant Women -- References -- Chapter 12: Explaining the High Labor Force Participation of Married Women from Asian Developing Countries -- Other Explanations -- Marriage Before or After Migration -- Relatives in the Home -- Cultural Factors -- Family Income -- Permanence -- References -- Chapter 13: Husbands and Wives: Work Decisions in a Family Investment Model? -- Immigrant Women's Propensity to Work and the Family Investment Return -- Chapter 14: Following Cohorts and Individuals Over Time: Work Decisions of Married Immigrant Women -- Analyzing the Decision to Work by Following Cohorts -- Marital Status and Following Cohorts -- Using Census Data to Follow the Propensity to Work of Individuals Over Time -- Insights on Hours of Work and Wages Following Cohorts -- Hours of Work the First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- Wages the First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- Concluding Remarks -- References Chapter 15: Unpaid Family Labor -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 16: Beyond the Immediate Family -- The Extended Family and Immigrant Self Employment -- References -- Part IV: More Recent Cohorts -- References -- Chapter 17: Entry Earnings, Earnings Growth, and Human Capital Investment: The 1985-1990 and 1995-2000 Cohorts -- China Disaggregated -- Are the Earnings Patterns We Observe Due to Anti-Asian Discrimination? -- References -- Part V: The Impact of Refugee Status -- References -- Chapter 18: Factors Associated with Refugee Status -- Community Ties and Extended Family -- Selection on Observed and Unobserved Characteristics -- Skill Transferability -- Permanence -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 19: The Earnings and Human Capital Investment of Southeast Asian Refugee Men: The 1975-1980 Cohort -- Investment in U.S. Human Capital -- English Proficiency -- Investment in Education -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 20: Married Refugee Women from South East Asia: The 1975-1980 Cohort -- Modeling the Propensity of South East Asian Women to Work -- Hours of Work: The First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- The Earnings of South East Asian Married Women: The First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- The Wages of Working South East Asian Married Immigrant Women: The First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- Concluding Remarks -- Chapter 21: Refugee Entrants from South East Asia, a Decade After the War: The 1985-1990 Cohort -- The Entry Characteristics of the 1975-1980 and 1985-1990 Cohorts -- Entry Earnings and Earnings Growth -- Human Capital Investment Patterns -- Concluding Remark -- Reference -- Part VI: A Brief Glance Backward and Conclusion -- Chapter 22: A Longer Perspective on Initial Conditions and Immigrant Adjustment -- The First Wave of Asian Immigration: Entry Characteristics -- Their Descendants References -- Chapter 23: Conclusion -- The Immigrant Human Capital Investment Model -- The Importance of Being Permanent -- Policy Implications of Our Results -- References -- Appendix A: Sample Size Information for Year-of-Entry Cohorts at Entry and Ten Years Later by Age and Education Categories -- Appendix B: Notes on Historical Data in Chap. 22 -- Statistics on Filipino Immigrants Before 1935 -- Index Human capital-United States Electronic books Regets, Mark C. Sonstige oth Sanders, Seth Sonstige oth Wunnava, Phanindra V. Sonstige oth Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Duleep, Harriet Human Capital Investment Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2021 9783030470821 |
spellingShingle | Duleep, Harriet Human Capital Investment A History of Asian Immigrants and Their Family Ties Intro -- Foreword -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Background and Overview -- Human Capital -- The Changing Nature of Immigration, Immigration Policy, and Immigration Research -- Changes in Immigration Research -- The Time Periods and Groups That Are Studied -- References -- Chapter 2: A Brief Review of Immigration from Asia -- References -- Part I: Theory and Methodology -- Chapter 3: What Caused the Decline in Immigrant Entry Earnings Following the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965? -- The Income-Distribution/Immigrant-Ability Hypothesis -- The Economic-Development/Skills-Transferability Hypothesis -- Level of Economic Development and Immigrant Skill Transferability -- References -- Chapter 4: The Immigrant Human Capital Investment Model -- The Effect of Education and Age on the Propensity to Invest in Human Capital -- The Importance of Permanence -- Economic Implications of the IHCI Model -- Measuring Skill Transferability -- Concluding Remark -- References -- Chapter 5: Methodological Implications of a Human Capital Investment Perspective -- Constraints on the Relationship Between Entry Earnings and Earnings Growth -- Constraints on the Sample -- Biases Created by Sample Constraints -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Part II: Earnings Growth and Human Capital Investment of Immigrant Men, the 1965-1970 and 1975-1980 Cohorts -- Chapter 6: The Earnings Growth of Asian Versus European Immigrants -- The Inverse Relationship: Asian and European Immigrants -- The Fixed-Cohort-Effect Model Revisited -- References -- Chapter 7: The Earnings Profiles of Immigrant Men in Specific Asian Groups: Cross-Sectional Versus Cohort-Based Estimates -- Initial Earnings -- Within-Country Changes in Entry Earnings -- Earnings Growth Cohort-Based Estimates of Immigrant Earnings Growth -- Why Are the Cross-Sectional and Cohort-Based Estimates of Earnings Growth So Similar? -- References -- Chapter 8: Modeling the Effect of a Factor Associated with Low Entry Earnings: Family Admissions and Immigrant Earnings Profiles -- Patterns of Admission -- Measuring the Effect of Admission Criteria on Immigrant Earnings -- Education and the Earnings' Effect of Admission Criteria -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 9: Human Capital Investment -- Investment in English Proficiency -- Occupational Change with Time in the United States -- Investment in Schooling -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 10: Permanence and the Propensity to Invest -- Japanese Immigrants and Permanence -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Part III: A Family Perspective -- References -- Chapter 11: Family Income -- Determinants of Family Income -- The Contributions of Immigrant Women -- References -- Chapter 12: Explaining the High Labor Force Participation of Married Women from Asian Developing Countries -- Other Explanations -- Marriage Before or After Migration -- Relatives in the Home -- Cultural Factors -- Family Income -- Permanence -- References -- Chapter 13: Husbands and Wives: Work Decisions in a Family Investment Model? -- Immigrant Women's Propensity to Work and the Family Investment Return -- Chapter 14: Following Cohorts and Individuals Over Time: Work Decisions of Married Immigrant Women -- Analyzing the Decision to Work by Following Cohorts -- Marital Status and Following Cohorts -- Using Census Data to Follow the Propensity to Work of Individuals Over Time -- Insights on Hours of Work and Wages Following Cohorts -- Hours of Work the First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- Wages the First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- Concluding Remarks -- References Chapter 15: Unpaid Family Labor -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 16: Beyond the Immediate Family -- The Extended Family and Immigrant Self Employment -- References -- Part IV: More Recent Cohorts -- References -- Chapter 17: Entry Earnings, Earnings Growth, and Human Capital Investment: The 1985-1990 and 1995-2000 Cohorts -- China Disaggregated -- Are the Earnings Patterns We Observe Due to Anti-Asian Discrimination? -- References -- Part V: The Impact of Refugee Status -- References -- Chapter 18: Factors Associated with Refugee Status -- Community Ties and Extended Family -- Selection on Observed and Unobserved Characteristics -- Skill Transferability -- Permanence -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 19: The Earnings and Human Capital Investment of Southeast Asian Refugee Men: The 1975-1980 Cohort -- Investment in U.S. Human Capital -- English Proficiency -- Investment in Education -- Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 20: Married Refugee Women from South East Asia: The 1975-1980 Cohort -- Modeling the Propensity of South East Asian Women to Work -- Hours of Work: The First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- The Earnings of South East Asian Married Women: The First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- The Wages of Working South East Asian Married Immigrant Women: The First Five Years and Ten Years Later -- Concluding Remarks -- Chapter 21: Refugee Entrants from South East Asia, a Decade After the War: The 1985-1990 Cohort -- The Entry Characteristics of the 1975-1980 and 1985-1990 Cohorts -- Entry Earnings and Earnings Growth -- Human Capital Investment Patterns -- Concluding Remark -- Reference -- Part VI: A Brief Glance Backward and Conclusion -- Chapter 22: A Longer Perspective on Initial Conditions and Immigrant Adjustment -- The First Wave of Asian Immigration: Entry Characteristics -- Their Descendants References -- Chapter 23: Conclusion -- The Immigrant Human Capital Investment Model -- The Importance of Being Permanent -- Policy Implications of Our Results -- References -- Appendix A: Sample Size Information for Year-of-Entry Cohorts at Entry and Ten Years Later by Age and Education Categories -- Appendix B: Notes on Historical Data in Chap. 22 -- Statistics on Filipino Immigrants Before 1935 -- Index Human capital-United States |
title | Human Capital Investment A History of Asian Immigrants and Their Family Ties |
title_auth | Human Capital Investment A History of Asian Immigrants and Their Family Ties |
title_exact_search | Human Capital Investment A History of Asian Immigrants and Their Family Ties |
title_exact_search_txtP | Human Capital Investment A History of Asian Immigrants and Their Family Ties |
title_full | Human Capital Investment A History of Asian Immigrants and Their Family Ties |
title_fullStr | Human Capital Investment A History of Asian Immigrants and Their Family Ties |
title_full_unstemmed | Human Capital Investment A History of Asian Immigrants and Their Family Ties |
title_short | Human Capital Investment |
title_sort | human capital investment a history of asian immigrants and their family ties |
title_sub | A History of Asian Immigrants and Their Family Ties |
topic | Human capital-United States |
topic_facet | Human capital-United States |
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