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The educational attainment of second-generation mainland Chinese immigrants in Taiwan
Authors:Wen-Jen Tsay
Institution:(1) Institute of Economics, Academia Sinica, 128 Academia Road, Sec. 2, Taipei, Taiwan
Abstract:The social status and well-being of political immigrants’ children are seldom touched upon in literature. This paper focuses on the impact of refugee experience on the relative educational attainment of second-generation immigrants in Taiwan. In contrast with the results in van Ours and Veenman (J Popul Econ 16(4):739–753, 2003) and Riphahn (J Popul Econ 16(4):711–737, 2003) who showed that second-generation immigrants lag behind their native counterparts, this paper’s principle finding is that the father’s immigration status can help his children achieve a higher educational qualification than native Taiwanese after controlling the relevant determinants of educational attainment, including parental background and the neighborhood where the interviewee grows up. In addition, women born in the earlier cohort benefit more by their fathers’ immigration status than their male counterparts do. However, Taiwanese schooling advances across generations are impressive, whereby the gap in schooling attainment between second-generation immigrants and native Taiwanese is found to decline over time.
Contact InformationWen-Jen TsayEmail: Fax: +886-2-27853946
Keywords:Second-generation political immigrants  Educational attainment  Language assimilation
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