Immigration and Underbanking: An Analysis of the Financial Integration of Immigrant Populations

Underbanking, or use of alternative financial services such as payday lenders rather than traditional banks, is a practice that has substantial financial and social harm. Given that literature and prior research shows that immigrants face unique cultural barriers to financial assimilation, the curre...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Baugh, James
Format: Others
Published: TopSCHOLAR® 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/3105
https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4095&context=theses
id ndltd-WKU-oai-digitalcommons.wku.edu-theses-4095
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-WKU-oai-digitalcommons.wku.edu-theses-40952019-10-15T04:50:38Z Immigration and Underbanking: An Analysis of the Financial Integration of Immigrant Populations Baugh, James Underbanking, or use of alternative financial services such as payday lenders rather than traditional banks, is a practice that has substantial financial and social harm. Given that literature and prior research shows that immigrants face unique cultural barriers to financial assimilation, the current study examines how immigrant status influences one’s odds of being underbanked. Using the June 2015 Underbanking Supplement to the Current Population Survey, immigrants are delineated by first- and second-generation status, as well by the development status of their country of origin, and their relationship to underbanking is examined through a series of logistic regression analyses. Results indicate that first-generation immigrants from developing countries continue to face substantial barriers to full financial assimilation, while those from developed countries share similar outcomes as citizens. Second-generation immigrants whose parents are from developing countries, however, have lower odds to be underbanked, showing that generational progress is occurring. Implications of this analyses are that future research should not assume immigrants all share one monolithic experience in the context of economic integration. 2019-04-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/3105 https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4095&context=theses Masters Theses & Specialist Projects TopSCHOLAR® sociology quantitative Other Sociology Social Statistics Sociology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic sociology
quantitative
Other Sociology
Social Statistics
Sociology
spellingShingle sociology
quantitative
Other Sociology
Social Statistics
Sociology
Baugh, James
Immigration and Underbanking: An Analysis of the Financial Integration of Immigrant Populations
description Underbanking, or use of alternative financial services such as payday lenders rather than traditional banks, is a practice that has substantial financial and social harm. Given that literature and prior research shows that immigrants face unique cultural barriers to financial assimilation, the current study examines how immigrant status influences one’s odds of being underbanked. Using the June 2015 Underbanking Supplement to the Current Population Survey, immigrants are delineated by first- and second-generation status, as well by the development status of their country of origin, and their relationship to underbanking is examined through a series of logistic regression analyses. Results indicate that first-generation immigrants from developing countries continue to face substantial barriers to full financial assimilation, while those from developed countries share similar outcomes as citizens. Second-generation immigrants whose parents are from developing countries, however, have lower odds to be underbanked, showing that generational progress is occurring. Implications of this analyses are that future research should not assume immigrants all share one monolithic experience in the context of economic integration.
author Baugh, James
author_facet Baugh, James
author_sort Baugh, James
title Immigration and Underbanking: An Analysis of the Financial Integration of Immigrant Populations
title_short Immigration and Underbanking: An Analysis of the Financial Integration of Immigrant Populations
title_full Immigration and Underbanking: An Analysis of the Financial Integration of Immigrant Populations
title_fullStr Immigration and Underbanking: An Analysis of the Financial Integration of Immigrant Populations
title_full_unstemmed Immigration and Underbanking: An Analysis of the Financial Integration of Immigrant Populations
title_sort immigration and underbanking: an analysis of the financial integration of immigrant populations
publisher TopSCHOLAR®
publishDate 2019
url https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/3105
https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4095&context=theses
work_keys_str_mv AT baughjames immigrationandunderbankingananalysisofthefinancialintegrationofimmigrantpopulations
_version_ 1719268792320655360