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Mexican Migration to the United States : The Role of Migration Networks and Human Capital Accumulation (Garland Studies in the History of American Labor)
 
 
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Mexican Migration to the United States : The Role of Migration Networks and Human Capital Accumulation (Garland Studies in the History of American Labor) [Library Binding]

Steven S. Zahniser (Author)

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Book Description

June 1999 0815331991 978-0815331995
Contrary to the thinking of some U.S. policymakers, changing macroeconomic conditions in the both the U.S. and Mexico have little effect on Mexican migration. This book evaluates the importance of family networks and human capital accumulation in the migration decisions of Mexican households.
Family networks substantially increase the likelihood that a Mexican head of household participates in the migration to the United States. The prior migration experience of close relatives and the presence of family and friends in the United States reduce migration costs and provide vital information about the migration process. Moreover, a head of household with a family network tends to be more transitory, spending shorter periods of time on both sides of the border. While in the United States, Mexican migrants may develop new talents and acquire valuable work experience, enabling them to secure higher wages in the Mexican labor market. To examine this largely unexplored topic, the book compares the monthly earnings in Mexico of persons with and without migration experience. U.S. experience is shown to have a powerful impact, with the first year yielding a six-percent increase in earnings. This return far exceeds that which results from an additional year of education or an additional year of work experience in Mexico. Thus the acquisition of human capital may be a powerful motive behind Mexico-U.S. migration, especially for younger Mexicans just entering the labor force.
(Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Colorado at Boulder, 1996; revised with new introduction and preface)

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
This book evaluates the influence of migration networks and human capital accumulation on Mexican migration to the United States. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
family migration experience, community dummy variables, migration spell, previous migration experience, quiero contestar, repeat migration, migration networks, parameter estimates for age, retrospective life histories, additional income sources, earnings regressions, migration decision, network variables, duration models, hypothesized sign, legal residency, prospective respondents, shorter spells, industrial owner, prospective migrant, participation models, survey year, migration costs, former migrant, standardized estimates
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, San Ramon, Mexican Migration Project, Appendix Table, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Lacks Has, Professor Massey, All Did Not Spend Year, Decade of Year, All of Year, Contact Contact, Has Specified Specified, Friend Period Prior To Years Prior, Migration Experience Type of Relative, Variable Model, Eastern Hemisphere, Hypothesized Net Effects of Explanatory Variables, Western Hemisphere
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