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Table 5 Multinomial logit regressions by education

From: Labor market mobility and the early-career outcomes of immigrant men

 

With a bachelor’s degree or higher degree

Without a bachelor’s degree

(1)

(2)

Outcome: unemployment

 White Canadian-born (predicted probability)

0.030***

0.065***

(0.009)

(0.009)

 Visible minority Canadian-born

− 0.025**

− 0.000

(0.010)

(0.030)

 White immigrant

− 0.014

− 0.005

(0.014)

(0.027)

 Visible minority immigrant

0.004

0.016

(0.030)

(0.035)

Outcome: different employer

 White Canadian-born (predicted probability)

0.050***

0.115***

(0.016)

(0.011)

 Visible minority Canadian-born

− 0.039**

− 0.006

(0.017)

(0.044)

 White immigrant

0.069

0.093

(0.065)

(0.069)

 Visible minority immigrant

0.023

0.069

(0.043)

(0.072)

Outcome: same employer and promoted

 White Canadian-born (predicted probability)

0.342***

0.356***

(0.029)

(0.021)

 Visible minority Canadian-born

− 0.012

− 0.084

(0.109)

(0.093)

 White immigrant

0.017

− 0.040

(0.081)

(0.068)

 Visible minority immigrant

− 0.085

− 0.194***

(0.067)

(0.050)

Outcome: same employer and not promoted

 White Canadian-born (predicted probability)

0.577***

0.464***

(0.030)

(0.020)

 Visible minority Canadian-born

0.076

0.092

(0.110)

(0.089)

 White immigrant

− 0.072

− 0.047

(0.084)

(0.070)

 Visible minority immigrant

0.057

0.108

(0.088)

(0.084)

# of observations

1275

3632

  1. Notes: See the notes for Table 2. We separately estimate the multinomial logit models for workers with a bachelor’s degree and those without such a degree and report the estimates in columns (1) and (2)
  2. *Significant at the 10% level; **significant at the 5% level; ***significant at the 1% level