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Does segregation matter for Latinos?

Author(s)
De la Roca, Jorge; Ellen, Ingrid Gould; Steil, Justin P
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Abstract
We estimate the effects of residential racial segregation on socio-economic outcomes for native-born Latino young adults over the past three decades. Using individual public use micro-data samples from the Census and a novel instrumental variable, we find that higher levels of metropolitan area segregation have negative effects on Latino young adults’ likelihood of being either employed or in school, on the likelihood of working in a professional occupation, and on income. The negative effects of segregation are somewhat larger for Latinos than for African Americans. Controlling for Latino and white exposure to neighborhood poverty, neighbors with college degrees, and industries that saw large increases in high-skill employment explains between one half and two thirds of the association between Latino-white segregation and Latino-white gaps in outcomes.
Date issued
2017-11
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/126052
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Urban Studies and Planning
Journal
Journal of Housing Economics
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Citation
De la Roca, Jorge; Ellen, Ingrid Gould; Steil, Justin. "Does segregation matter for Latinos?" Journal of Housing Economics 40 (2018): 129-141 © 2017 Author(s)
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
1096-0791
1051-1377

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