Wage, literacy, and numeracy skills inequality: Do immigration admission categories matter?
Authors: Richard E. Mueller and N. T. Khuong Truong
Overview
Abstract (English)
Using the 2012 Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC), we explore differences in literacy and numeracy skills, and the economic returns to these skills, for Canadian immigrants and non-immigrants. The novelty of this research is disaggregating the sample into seven distinct immigrant groups (based on admission class) and second and third-generation Canadians. Our results show that no immigrant group performs as well on literacy and numeracy tests compared to those born in Canada, although young immigrants do outperform adult immigrants. Similar results are found for wages, our metric for success in the labour market. Of the immigrant subgroups, economic immigrants tend to have the highest test scores and hourly wages, with refugees having the lowest. The wage returns to these basic skills are economically significant across all quantiles. Finally, we find that the labour market rewards literacy or numeracy skills equally for immigrants and the Canadian-born
Abstract (French)
Please note that abstracts only appear in the language of the publication and might not have a translation.
Details
Type | Working paper (online) |
---|---|
Author | Richard E. Mueller and N. T. Khuong Truong |
Publication Year | 2020 |
Title | Wage, literacy, and numeracy skills inequality: Do immigration admission categories matter? |
Series | Social Science Research Network (SSRN) Working Paper |
Number | 3587756 |
Institution | Social Science Research Network (SSRN) |
Publication Language | English |
- Richard E. Mueller
- Working paper (online)
- Wage, literacy, and numeracy skills inequality: Do immigration admission categories matter?
- Richard E. Mueller and N. T. Khuong Truong
- Social Science Research Network (SSRN) Working Paper
- 2020
- 3587756