Volume 37, Number 1 (Winter) 2002

Bratsberg, Bernt, and James F. Ragan , Jr. 2002. "The Impact of Host-Country Schooling on Earnings: A Study of Male Immigrants in the United States." Journal of Human Resources 37(1):63-105.

Immigrants in the United States who acquire U.S. schooling earn higher wages than other immigrants, Using data from the U.S. censuses and the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, we show that this wage advantage results from both greater educational attainment and higher returns to education, The higher returns are not the consequence of ability bias or greater English proficiency of those who acquire U.S. schooling, Returns to years of non-U.S. education are higher for immigrants who complete their schooling in the United States, consistent with the view that U.S. schooling upgrades or certifies education received in the source country. For those without U.S. schooling, returns are higher for immigrants from highly developed countries and countries for which English is an official language.

Bernt Bratsberg and James F. Ragan, Jr. are both professors of economics at Kansas State University. The authors thank two anonymous referees for helpful comments, The data used in this article can be obtained beginning May 2002 through April 2005 from Bernt Bratsberg, Department of Economics, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506.


© 2003 by the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System

US ISSN 0022-166X

Return to JHR Home Page