Racial Diversity, Immigrants and the Well-Being of Residents: Evidence from US Counties
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2018
Department
School of Business
Abstract
This paper presents empirical evidence that racial diversity and immigrant population at the local level tend to be associated with lower life satisfaction for Whites by matching individual data with the county-level population data during the period 2005–2010. The magnitudes I find suggest that a ten-percentage-point increase in the share of the non-White population (approximately one half of a standard deviation) is associated with 0.006 and 0.007 points reduction in life satisfaction on a four-point scale for White men and White women, respectively. For White men, this effect appears to be driven by the percentage of the population that is Black. I also find that a ten-percentage-point increase in the percentage of the immigrant population (approximately 2 standard deviations) is associated with 0.009 and 0.021 points reduction in life satisfaction for White men and White women, respectively. The percentage of the non-White population seems to reduce older Whites’ life satisfaction more than that of younger Whites. Though the scale of the findings relating to the impact of local racial compositions and immigrant population is relatively modest, the findings may pose a challenge in the coming years as the percentage of the population that is non-White rises in the USA.
DOI
10.1007/s00148-017-0657-9
First Page
107
Last Page
133
Volume
31
Issue
1
ISSN
09331433
Recommended Citation
Kuroki, M. (2018). Racial diversity, immigrants and the well-being of residents: evidence from US counties. Journal of Population Economics, 31(1): 107–133. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00148-017-0657-9