Back to Search
Start Over
Social Ties and the Job Search of Recent Immigrants
- Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- We show that increasing the probability of obtaining a job offer through the network should raise the observed mean wage in jobs found through formal (non-network) channels relative to that in jobs found through the network. This prediction also holds at all percentiles of the observed wage distribution, except the highest and lowest. The largest changes are likely to occur below the median. We test and confirm these implications using a survey of recent immigrants to Canada. We also develop a simple structural model, consistent with the theoretical model, and show that it can replicate the broad patterns in the data. For recent immigrants, our results are consistent with the primary effect of strong networks being to increase the arrival rate of offers rather than to alter the distribution from which offers are drawn.
- Subjects :
- Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION
business.industry
Applied economics
Strategy and Management
media_common.quotation_subject
05 social sciences
Immigration
Wage
Distribution (economics)
Differential (mechanical device)
jel:J61
jel:J31
jel:J64
jel:J30
Microeconomics
Interpersonal ties
Business economics
social networks
search
close ties
wage determination
employment
unemployment
Management of Technology and Innovation
0502 economics and business
050207 economics
business
050205 econometrics
media_common
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2b908176965e0713bc57b9012385fb4f