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Does Neighbourhood Ethnic Concentration in Early Life Affect Subsequent Labour Market Outcomes? A Study across Ethnic Groups in England and Wales
Carolina V. Zuccotti y Lucinda Platt.
Population Space and Place, vol. 23, núm. e2041, 2016, pp. ---.
  ARK: https://n2t.net/ark:/13683/pbh9/ZSb
Resumen
The impact of ethnic concentration in the neighbourhood on ethnic minorities´ outcomes is a contested topic, with mixed empirical results. In this paper, we use a largescale longitudinal dataset of England and Wales, covering a 40-year period, to assess the impact of neighbourhood co-ethnic concentration in childhood on subsequent adult labour market outcomes. We distinguish the five main minority groups in the UK and develop theoretical expectations about how social interaction mechanisms in the neighbourhood might influence their employment and occupational attainment, given different group (cultural values, ethnic capital) and individual (gender) characteristics. By separating in time explanatory and explained variables, and by controlling for factors that mediate or confound co-ethnic concentration, such as neighbourhood deprivation, household resources in childhood (i.e. parental social class), and individuals´ own education, our analytical model tackles potential problems of self-selection and endogeneity. Among other findings, we find that greater concentration of co-ethnics in the neighbourhood results in substantially lower labour market participation and lower occupational attainment for Pakistani and Bangladeshi women; but better occupational outcomes for Indian men. We link the outcomes for Pakistani and Bangladeshi women to cultural maintenance of more traditional norms, facilitated by greater social interaction. The results for Indian men, instead, suggest the positive role that high levels of group resources or ethnic capital can play. Our study is, we believe, the first to demonstrate a role for co-ethnic concentration in childhood in explaining Pakistani and Bangladeshi women´s low labour market participation and Indian men´s labour market success.
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