Nate Hilger (Brown University) will present:
"Upward Mobility and Discrimination: The Case of Asian Americans"
at 3:20pm on Wednesday, May 24, 2017 in 310 Silsby.

Please sign up for a meeting at:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1BaXBUJXl2j9WR9zdvHyXNm-O-lQTA_KSoq1-S5ZzqgU/edit?usp=sharing


Abstract


Asian Americans are the only non-white US racial group to experience long-term, institutional discrimination and subsequently exhibit high income. I re-examine this puzzle in California, where most Asians settled historically. Asians achieved extraordinary upward mobility relative to blacks and whites for every cohort born in California since 1920. This mobility stemmed primarily from gains in earnings conditional on education, rather than unusual educational mobility. Historical test score and prejudice data suggest low initial earnings for Asians, unlike blacks, reflected prejudice rather than skills. Post-war declines in discrimination interacting with previously uncompensated skills can account for Asians' extraordinary upward mobility.






########################################################################

To unsubscribe from the ECONOMICS-SEMINARS list, click the following link:
https://listserv.dartmouth.edu/scripts/wa.exe?SUBED1=ECONOMICS-SEMINARS