Volume 30, Number 1 (Winter) 1995
Yuengert, Andrew M. 1995. "Testing Hypothesis of Immigrant Self-Employment." Journal of Human Resources 30(1):194-204.
This paper attempts to explain high rates of immigration self-employment, relative to native workers. Three hypotheses are tested. Estimates of a two-sector model of earnings support the home-country self-employment hypothesis: immigrants from countries with larger self-employed sectors have higher self-employment rates. The data also support the tax-avoidance hypothesis. These two hypothesis explain 62 percent of the immigrant-native self-employment differential. There is little support for the enclave hypothesis. Enclaves do, however, affect sectoral earnings, in ways that are consistent with compensating differentials for enclave life, or negative selection into enclaves.-
Andrew M. Yuengert is a professor in the Business Administration Division of Pepperdine University.
© 2002 by the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
US ISSN 0022-166X