Color Lines, Country Lines: Race, Immigration, and Wealth Stratification in America

Color Lines, Country Lines: Race, Immigration, and Wealth Stratification in America

by Lingxin Hao
ISBN-10:
0871543192
ISBN-13:
9780871543196
Pub. Date:
02/18/2010
Publisher:
Russell Sage Foundation
ISBN-10:
0871543192
ISBN-13:
9780871543196
Pub. Date:
02/18/2010
Publisher:
Russell Sage Foundation
Color Lines, Country Lines: Race, Immigration, and Wealth Stratification in America

Color Lines, Country Lines: Race, Immigration, and Wealth Stratification in America

by Lingxin Hao

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Overview

The growing number of immigrants living and working in America has become a controversial topic from classrooms to corporations and from kitchen tables to Capitol Hill. Many native-born Americans fear that competition from new arrivals will undermine the economic standing of low-skilled American workers, and that immigrants may not successfully integrate into the U.S. economy. In Color Lines, Country Lines, sociologist Lingxin Hao argues that the current influx of immigrants is changing America's class structure, but not in the ways commonly believed. Drawing on twenty years of national survey data, Color Lines, Country Lines investigates how immigrants are faring as they try to accumulate enough wealth to join the American middle class, and how, in the process, they are transforming historic links between race and socioeconomic status. Hao finds that disparities in wealth among immigrants are large and growing, including disparities among immigrants of the same race or ethnicity. Cuban immigrants have made substantially more progress than arrivals from the Dominican Republic, Chinese immigrants have had more success than Vietnamese or Korean immigrants, and Jamaicans have fared better than Haitians and immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa. Indeed, many of these immigrant groups have acquired more wealth than native-born Americans of the same race or ethnicity. Hao traces these diverging paths to differences in the political and educational systems of the immigrants' home countries, as well as to preferential treatment of some groups by U.S. immigration authorities and the U.S. labor market. As a result, individuals' country of origin increasingly matters more than their race in determining their prospects for acquiring wealth. In a novel analysis, Hao predicts that as large numbers of immigrants arrive in the United States every year, the variation in wealth within racial groups will continue to grow, reducing wealth inequalities between racial groups. If upward mobility remains restricted to only some groups, then the old divisions of wealth by race will gradually become secondary to new disparities based on country of origin. However, if the labor market and the government are receptive to all immigrant groups, then the assimilation of immigrants into the middle class will help diminish wealth inequality in society as a whole. Immigrants' assimilation into the American mainstream and the impact of immigration on the American economy are inextricably linked, and each issue can only be understood in light of the other. Color Lines, Country Lines shows why some immigrant groups are struggling to get by while others have managed to achieve the American dream and reveals the surprising ways in which immigration is reshaping American society.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780871543196
Publisher: Russell Sage Foundation
Publication date: 02/18/2010
Pages: 326
Product dimensions: 5.80(w) x 8.80(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

LINGXIN HAO is professor of sociology at John Hopkins University.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents Chapter 1. Introduction 1 Chapter 2. A Theoretical Model for Wealth in an Era of Immigration 18 Chapter 3. Wealth Distribution by Race and Nativity: An Overview 76 Chapter 4. Assets and Debts Among Latino Immigrants104 Chapter 5. Assets and Debts Among Asian Immigrants176 Chapter 6. Assets and Debts Among Black Immigrants236 Chapter 7. Wealth Stratification and Assimilation through Wealth Attainment275 Chapter 8. Contextual Conditions of Wealth Attainment316 Chapter 9. Looking Ahead: Immigration, Stratification, and Assimilation350 Appendix A. The Use of Survey of Income and Program Participation366 Appendix B. Appendix Tables and Figures383 References403
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