This paper examines the relationship between interethnic marriages and economic
assimilation among immigrants in the United States. Two competing hypotheses are
evaluated: the productivity hypothesis, according to which immigrants married to native-born
spouses assimilate faster than comparable immigrants married to foreign-born spouses
because spouses play an integral role in the human capital accumulation of their partners;
and the selection hypothesis, according to which the relationship between intermarriages and
assimilation is spurious because intermarried immigrants are a selected subsample from the
population of all married immigrants. These two hypotheses are analyzed within a model in
which earnings of immigrants and their interethnic marital status are jointly determined. The
empirical evidence favors the selection hypothesis. Non-intermarried immigrants tend to be
negatively selected, and the intermarriage premium obtained by the least squares completely
vanishes once we account for the selection.
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