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Ethnic persistence, assimilation and risk proclivity
2012
IZA Journal of Migration
This paper investigates whether immigrants adapt to the attitudes of the majority population in the host country by focusing on the effect of ethnic persistence and assimilation on individual risk proclivity. Employing information from a unique representative German survey, we find that adaptation to the host country closes the existing immigrant-native gap in risk proclivity by reducing immigrants' risk aversion and explains the systematic variation in the observed risk attitudes across
doi:10.1186/2193-9039-1-5
fatcat:hp5hmkkcavctnkoalbuuiufviq