Research Note: New Estimates of Immigrants' Self-employment From Linked Tax Records.

Christopher R Tamborini, Andrés Villarreal
Author Information
  1. Christopher R Tamborini: U.S. Social Security Administration, Baltimore, MD, USA; Maryland Population Research Center, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA. ORCID
  2. Andrés Villarreal: Department of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA. ORCID

Abstract

Self-employment plays a crucial role in immigrants' economic assimilation. Previous studies examining immigrants' self-employment relied on estimates obtained from national surveys, which could contain measurement error. In this research note, we compare estimates of immigrant men's self-employment obtained from the Current Population Survey (CPS) with those from data linking respondents to their tax records. Our findings indicate that the CPS substantially underestimates the immigrant-native gap in self-employment. In some cases, the rate of self-employment for immigrants from administrative data is nearly double that obtained from survey data alone. Measurement error also appears to distort estimated differences in self-employment among immigrants by race, ethnicity, and national origin. The results highlight the greater importance of self-employment for the labor market integration of immigrant men than was previously known on the basis of survey data alone.

Keywords

References

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Grants

  1. P2C HD041022/NICHD NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Humans
Emigrants and Immigrants
Male
Employment
Adult
United States
Middle Aged
Young Adult
Socioeconomic Factors
Taxes
Adolescent
Sociodemographic Factors

Word Cloud

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