Education and social support: do migrants benefit as much as natives?

Abstract Education and having access to social support play a vital role in the human life. Integrated and better-educated people demonstrate an increased personal health and well-being. Social isolation, on the contrary, can affect not only the personal development, but also pertains to society. Th...

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Main Authors: Jana Brandt, Kyra Selina Hagge
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-10-01
Series:Comparative Migration Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-020-00199-w
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spelling doaj-3f3515fb327045189c5b67cb03325bad2020-11-25T03:05:39ZengSpringerOpenComparative Migration Studies2214-594X2020-10-018114010.1186/s40878-020-00199-wEducation and social support: do migrants benefit as much as natives?Jana Brandt0Kyra Selina Hagge1Department of Economics, Justus Liebig University GiessenFaculty of Economics and Business Science, Justus Liebig University GiessenAbstract Education and having access to social support play a vital role in the human life. Integrated and better-educated people demonstrate an increased personal health and well-being. Social isolation, on the contrary, can affect not only the personal development, but also pertains to society. These topics are especially relevant in the current migration debate. Our paper examines the link between schooling and the individuals’ probability to receive different types of social support, in particular emotional, instrumental, informational, and appraisal support. Using logit and ordinal logit regressions on cross-sectional micro-data provided by the SOEP, we distinguish between two subgroups, the native population and people who migrated to Germany. Our findings confirm that higher levels of education increase the probability to access social support as well as the number of support providers in the network. Migrants are disadvantaged when it comes to the access of social support. However, our results suggest no significant negative returns to education for people with migration experiences.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-020-00199-wReturns to educationSocial supportSocial networksMigrantsLogit-regressionInteraction effects
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jana Brandt
Kyra Selina Hagge
spellingShingle Jana Brandt
Kyra Selina Hagge
Education and social support: do migrants benefit as much as natives?
Comparative Migration Studies
Returns to education
Social support
Social networks
Migrants
Logit-regression
Interaction effects
author_facet Jana Brandt
Kyra Selina Hagge
author_sort Jana Brandt
title Education and social support: do migrants benefit as much as natives?
title_short Education and social support: do migrants benefit as much as natives?
title_full Education and social support: do migrants benefit as much as natives?
title_fullStr Education and social support: do migrants benefit as much as natives?
title_full_unstemmed Education and social support: do migrants benefit as much as natives?
title_sort education and social support: do migrants benefit as much as natives?
publisher SpringerOpen
series Comparative Migration Studies
issn 2214-594X
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Education and having access to social support play a vital role in the human life. Integrated and better-educated people demonstrate an increased personal health and well-being. Social isolation, on the contrary, can affect not only the personal development, but also pertains to society. These topics are especially relevant in the current migration debate. Our paper examines the link between schooling and the individuals’ probability to receive different types of social support, in particular emotional, instrumental, informational, and appraisal support. Using logit and ordinal logit regressions on cross-sectional micro-data provided by the SOEP, we distinguish between two subgroups, the native population and people who migrated to Germany. Our findings confirm that higher levels of education increase the probability to access social support as well as the number of support providers in the network. Migrants are disadvantaged when it comes to the access of social support. However, our results suggest no significant negative returns to education for people with migration experiences.
topic Returns to education
Social support
Social networks
Migrants
Logit-regression
Interaction effects
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-020-00199-w
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