88 lines
3 KiB
YAML
88 lines
3 KiB
YAML
abstract: 'Previous research on understanding race-ethnic differentials in
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employment and economic contributions by married women has primarily
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focused on Blacks, Hispanics, or Whites. This study investigates
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variations in wives'' earning contributions as measured by wives earnings
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as a proportion of total annual household earnings among six Asian
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groups, Asian Indian, Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean, and
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Vietnamese relative to native born non-Hispanic White. I disaggregate
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the six Asian groups by their ethnicity and nativity status. Using
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pooled data from 2009-2011 American Community Survey, the findings show
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significance of human capital, hours of paid labor market engagement and
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nativity status. There is strong and negative association between
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husbands'' human capital and labor supply with wives'' earning
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contributions suggesting near universality of male-breadwinner status.
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Notwithstanding the commonalities, there is significant intergroup
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diversity. While foreign born and native born Filipina wives despite
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their spouses'' reasonably high human capital and work hours, contribute
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one of the highest shares, the same cannot be said for the Asian Indians
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and Japanese. For foreign born Asian Indian and to some extent Japanese
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women, their high human capital is not translated to high earning
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contribution after controlling for husband''s human capital. Further,
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nativity status impacts groups differentially. Native born Vietnamese
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wives contribute the greatest. Overall, the findings underscore the
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relevance of employing multiple conceptual frameworks in understanding
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earning contributions of foreign and native born Asian wives belonging
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to the six Asian groups, Asian Indian, Chinese, Filipino, Japanese,
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Korean, and Vietnamese. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.'
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affiliation: 'Kulkarni, VS (Corresponding Author), Arkansas State Univ, Dept Criminol
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Sociol \& Geog, POB 2410, State Univ, AR 72467 USA.
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Arkansas State Univ, Dept Criminol Sociol \& Geog, State Univ, AR 72467 USA.'
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author: Kulkarni, Veena S.
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author-email: vkulkarni@astate.edu
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author_list:
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- family: Kulkarni
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given: Veena S.
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da: '2023-09-28'
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doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2015.03.002
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eissn: 1096-0317
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files: []
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issn: 0049-089X
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journal: SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH
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keywords: Asian Americans; Comparative; Immigrant households; Wives' earnings
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keywords-plus: 'LABOR-FORCE PARTICIPATION; DUAL-EARNER COUPLES; UNITED-STATES; WOMENS
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EMPLOYMENT; AMERICAN-WOMEN; ADAPTIVE STRATEGIES; GENDER INEQUALITY;
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INDIAN IMMIGRANTS; MARRIED-WOMEN; FAMILY'
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language: English
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month: JUL
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number-of-cited-references: '95'
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pages: 539-557
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papis_id: 8faf15dbf3943526b7266daf9689629c
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ref: Kulkarni2015herearnings
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times-cited: '4'
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title: 'Her earnings: Exploring variation in wives'' earning contributions across
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six major Asian groups and Whites'
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type: article
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unique-id: WOS:000355766900036
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usage-count-last-180-days: '0'
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usage-count-since-2013: '22'
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volume: '52'
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web-of-science-categories: Sociology
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year: '2015'
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