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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2015 Sep 1.
Published in final edited form as: Soc Sci Res. 2014 Mar 29;47:61–78. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2014.03.009

Table 2.

OLS Predictors of Mexican-immigrant dissimilarity from native-born, non-Hispanic whites, 2005–2009

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5)
New Mexican destination 6.497 *** (1.778) 1.768 (2.436) 3.843 (2.352) 2.182 (2.100) 1.942 (2.172)
Percent undocumented .206 *** (.074) .181 ** (.076) .138 * (.081) .169 * (.087)
Mexican-immigrant assimilation
  Percent proficient in English −.012 (.165) −.244 * (.145) −.243 * (.145)
  Mexican-white income ratio −.383 *** (.080) −.242 *** (.074) −.243 *** (.075)
Population and housing
  Total population (ln) 4.856 *** (.843) 4.815 *** (.851)
  Percent immigrant −.219 (.135) −.212 (.136)
  Percent black .067 (.103) .077 (.106)
  Percent new housing −.655 *** (.140) −.658 *** (.140)
Economic structure
  Percent college-educated −.136 (.170) −.158 (.178)
  Percent in low-skill service .384 (.481) .346 (.490)
  Percent in construction .012 (.642) −.030 (.650)
  Percent in manfacturing −.262 (.286) −.280 (.289)
  Percent in farming .249 (.377) .214 (.387)
Destination type interaction
  New × Percent undocumented −.056 (.122)
Constant 53.931 *** (1.346) 56.643 *** (1.640) 55.452 *** (1.567) 56.405 (1.358) 56.855 ** (1.684)
R-squared .091 .140 .270 .579 .579
Adjusted R-squared .084 .127 .247 .534 .531

Notes:

*

p < .10;

**

p < .05;

***

p < .01;

standard errors in parentheses; N = 136 metropolitan areas with at least 1,000 total Mexican immigrants and 100 or more unweighted adult Mexican immigrants in ACS PUMS; continuous covariates are centered