Hagan Jacqueline Maria, Wassink Joshua
Department of Sociology, 155 Hamilton Hall, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 27599-3210, 832 876 5069.
Department of Sociology, 155 Hamilton Hall, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 27599-3210, 319 530 8284.
Soc Probl. 2016 Nov;63(4):513-533. doi: 10.1093/socpro/spw021. Epub 2016 Oct 3.
Numerous studies have documented a high propensity for self-employment and business formation among return migrants relative to non-migrants. The literature points to the importance of remitted savings, migration duration, and number and types of jobs abroad for business formation upon return. Implicit in this scholarship is the assumption that migrants acquire not only financial capital, but also human capital, which expands their opportunities upon return. Empirical work has demonstrated how the transfer of formal human capital, such as language skills and professional credentials, influences the mobility pathways of professional return migrants. More recent research has also found that the transfer of informal human capital, such as social and technical skills learned on the job, shape the mobility pathways of return migrants with little schooling. Absent from this scholarship, however, are studies that directly test the relationship between the transfer of informal human capital and the odds of business formation among return migrants. In this paper, we address this gap. Using a multidimensional skills variable, which includes social, technical, and English language competences, we measure and test the relationship between skill acquisition and transfer and business formation among return migrants. Drawing on findings from a survey of 200 return migrants and 200 non-migrants in Mexico, we show that return migrants who successfully acquire and transfer new skills across the migratory circuit often leverage their new knowledge to launch businesses. Our findings have wide implications for how social scientists conceptualize and measure human capital formation across the migratory circuit.
大量研究表明,相对于非移民而言,返乡移民自主创业和创办企业的倾向较高。文献指出,汇款储蓄、移民时长以及在国外的工作数量和类型对于返乡后创办企业具有重要意义。该学术研究中隐含的一个假设是,移民不仅获得了金融资本,还获得了人力资本,这增加了他们返乡后的机会。实证研究表明,正式人力资本的转移,如语言技能和专业证书,如何影响专业返乡移民的流动路径。最近的研究还发现,非正式人力资本的转移,如在工作中学到的社交和技术技能,塑造了受教育程度低的返乡移民的流动路径。然而,该学术研究缺乏直接检验非正式人力资本转移与返乡移民创办企业几率之间关系的研究。在本文中,我们填补了这一空白。我们使用一个多维技能变量,其中包括社交、技术和英语语言能力,来衡量和检验技能获取与转移和返乡移民创办企业之间的关系。基于对墨西哥200名返乡移民和200名非移民的调查结果,我们表明,成功在移民过程中获取并转移新技能的返乡移民通常会利用他们的新知识来创业。我们的研究结果对于社会科学家如何在移民过程中概念化和衡量人力资本形成具有广泛的意义。