Economic Opportunity and the Responses of “Old” and “New” Migrants to the United States
- 1 December 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Journal of Economic History
- Vol. 38 (4) , 901-917
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022050700087155
Abstract
The hostile and patronizing attitudes of native Americans toward the increasing number of immigrants from southern and eastern Europe at the turn of the century raise a number of issues that bear on the history of U.S. immigration policy and on other matters. Utilizing Zellner's SUR technique, a model of settlement patterns of ten immigrant nationalities is estimated, and the appropriate F-statistics are generated to test several of these issues: (1) Did “new” immigrants behave as purposefully as contemporaneous “old” migrants from northwestern Europe? (2) Did they react as did the old migrants to a variety of socioeconomic factors? (3) Were the new migrants more dependent on the cultural support of earlier migrated countrymen? The findings indicate diverse, but purposeful, behavior within both the new and the old migrant groups with few systematic differences between them.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Role of Migrant Stock and Lagged Migration in the Settlement Patterns of Nineteenth Century ImmigrantsThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1977
- The Influence of Family and Friends on Geographic Labor Mobility: An International ComparisonThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1973
- The increasing urbanization thesis-did “new immigrants” to the United States have a particular fondness for urban life?Explorations in Economic History, 1971
- LAGGED RESPONSE IN THE DECISION TO MIGRATEJournal of Regional Science, 1970
- An Efficient Method of Estimating Seemingly Unrelated Regressions and Tests for Aggregation BiasJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1962
- MIGRATION, REAL INCOME AND INFORMATION1Journal of Regional Science, 1959