黎巴嫩、巴勒斯坦和叙利亚裔美国人的经济不平等和自主创业的选择

J. Wright
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引用次数: 1

摘要

居住在美国的不同国籍群体对自营职业的依赖程度差别很大。对某些原籍国的偏见使一些移民或族裔更难以绕过迫使他们脱离传统职业结构的就业等级制度;宗教也会对就业构成强大的障碍。其结果是,面临严重歧视的群体选择以高得离谱的比率创办自己的企业。在少数民族经济飞地内,社会上不受欢迎的子群体在经济上处于不利地位,这也是事实。这种情况使个体就业率成为民族经济歧视的一个重要指标。本文调查了社会距离在黎巴嫩、巴勒斯坦和叙利亚种族或民族背景的美国人中促进自营职业的作用。Borjas等人认为,移民是一个自我选择的过程,在这个过程中,有动力的人通过在东道国自主创业而重新安置并脱颖而出[1]。这种循环使得“移民决策本身的背景对于理解移民的劳动力市场结果很重要,[…]包括]教育,…国籍,……这篇文章是在北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校梅隆基金会研究生研讨会上发表的一篇关于种族和民族经济不平等的演讲的修订版。作者要感谢William J. Darity和Gary S. Becker博士对这项研究的注释。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Economic Inequality and the Choice of Self-Employment among Americans of Lebanese, Palestinian, and Syrian Ethnic Descent
Self-employment dependency varies drastically between national origin groups living in the United States. Prejudicial feelings against some nations of origin make it more difficult for some immigrants or ethnics to bypass employment hierarchies that force them out of the traditional occupational structure; religion can also form strong barriers to employment. The result is that groups who face high levels of discrimination choose to form their own businesses at inordinately high rates. It is also true that within ethnic economic enclaves socially unpopular subgroups are placed at an economic disadvantage. This situation makes the rate of self-employment a key indi­ cator of ethnic economic discrimination. This article investigates the role of social distance in promoting self-employment among Americans with Lebanese, Palestinian, and Syrian ethnicity or national backgrounds. Borjas and others argued that immigration is a self-selecting process wherein motivated people relocate and excel via self-employment in the host country [1]. This cycle makes "the context of the migration decision itself is important for understanding labor-market outcomes for immigrants, [. . . including] edu­ cation, . . . national origin, . . . time of migration [2, p. 987] and indicates that *This article is a revised version of a lecture delivered to the Mellon Foundation post-graduate seminar on racial and ethnic economic inequality at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The author would like to thank William J. Darity, and Dr. Gary S. Becker for his notes on this research.
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