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Tigau, Camelia; Guerra, Bernardo Bolaños – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2015
This paper examines the relationship between skills prices (wage premiums) and inequality in migrant sending countries (mainly from Latin America) and explores the implications for education policies. Most of the evidence is based on the case of Mexico, a Latin American country that is also an Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development…
Descriptors: Correlation, Foreign Countries, Immigrants, Educational Policy
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Quinn, Michael A.; Rubb, Stephen – Economics of Education Review, 2006
The positive impact of education on earnings, wages, and economic growth is well documented; however, the issue of education-occupation matching in developing countries has been largely ignored. Since workers' levels of schooling and their occupations' required level of education both affect wages, policymakers may find it useful to note if such…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Labor Market, Wages, Productivity
Jencks, Christopher – New York Review of Books, 2001
Reviews seven books on immigration, discussing what recent scholarship tells about the ways that successive waves of immigrants affect people already living in the United States. The books examine: the arrival of Indians from North Asia, the case against immigration, immigration policy and U.S. economics, the U.S. experience with international…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indians, Cultural Differences, Economic Impact
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Massey, Douglas S. – International Migration Review, 1987
This article examines the effects of legal status on wage rates among Mexican migrants. The findings show little wage discrimination against illegal migrants, but their illegal status does reduce the duration of their stay. The total amount of employer capital spent on them is less than that for legal migrants. (VM)
Descriptors: Bias, Employer Attitudes, Employment Level, Employment Practices
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Ranney, Susan; Kossoudji, Sherrie A. – International Migration Review, 1984
Reviews data on the labor market experience of Mexican female temporary migrants in the United States. Analyzes data from a Mexican national survey and compares the role of schooling, work experience, region of origin,and legal status in male and female migrants' working experiences. (KH)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Females, Foreign Countries, Mexicans
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Carballo, Emmanuel – Babel: International Journal of Translation, 1980
Describes the role and socioeconomic status of translators in the Latin American countries. Blames the poor quality of translations on inadequate compensation based on the piecework system. It also advocates translators' unionization as a first step to obtain higher salaries and contracts covering all benefits guaranteed to workers under labor…
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Employer Employee Relationship, Interpreters, Labor Legislation
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Psacharopoulos, George; And Others – Education Economics, 1996
Uses data from 1984, 1989, and 1992 household surveys to investigate the earnings/education relationship in Mexico. Time-series analysis results indicate that the returns to investment in education are depressed during an economic recession and rise again as economic growth resumes. Returns to education remain high, even after significantly…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Developing Nations, Economic Factors, Education Work Relationship