| Author (Person) | Brockmann, Hilke |
|---|---|
| Publisher | European Commission |
| Series Title | RSCAS Working Papers |
| Series Details | No 63, 2017 |
| Publication Date | 01/01/2017 |
| ISSN | 1028-3625 |
| Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
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Abstract: First-generation immigrants in Germany are surprisingly satisfied with their life. We test to what extent selection, adaptation, or resilience explains their comparatively high level of subjective well-being (SWB). Using Panel data from 1984-2014, we run simultaneous probit and growth curve models and identify competing mechanisms of positive integration. We find mixed evidence for health selection: First-generation immigrants are younger but overall less healthy than Germans. Irrespective of selectivity, significant evidence supports purposive adaptation: First-generation immigrants maintain high levels of happiness by using the local German population as a benchmark only to evaluate their economic situation but not to evaluate their family life. Thus, there is economic but not socio-cultural adaptation. Finally, we find some evidence of higher social but not economic resilience among first-generation immigrants than among Germans. We speculate what this implies for family unification for migrants. |
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| Source Link | Link to Main Source http://hdl.handle.net/1814/49424 |
| Subject Categories | Justice and Home Affairs |
| Countries / Regions | Germany |