(Press-News.org) AMHERST, Mass. — Immigrants in the United States earn 10.6% less than similarly educated U.S.-born workers, largely because they are concentrated in lower-paying industries, occupations and companies, according to a major new study published today in Nature, co-authored by a University of Massachusetts Amherst sociologist who studies equal opportunity in employment. The research—one of the most comprehensive global comparisons of immigrant labor market integration to date—analyzes linked employer-employee data from over 13 million people across nine advanced economies in Europe and North America.
The U.S. results, drawn from a unique combination of Census Bureau, earnings and employer data, reveal that only about one-quarter of the wage gap is due to pay inequality within the same job and company. Instead, the majority stems from structural barriers that limit immigrants’ access to better-paying workplaces.
“These findings are important because they show that most of the immigrant wage gap isn’t about being paid less for the same work—it’s about not getting into the highest-paying jobs and firms in the first place,” says Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, professor of sociology and founding director of the Center for Employment Equity at UMass Amherst.
Key U.S. Findings
First-generation immigrants with legal status in the U.S. earn 10.6% less than comparable native-born workers.
3.4%, a third of that gap, is attributable to unequal pay for the same job at the same employer.
No data was available on second-generation immigrants in the U.S., but other countries showed persistent but smaller gaps into the next generation.
The study suggests that efforts to close immigrant wage gaps should focus on increasing immigrants’ access to better jobs and firms. Promising approaches include:
Language and skills training
Recognition of foreign credentials
Access to professional networks
Employer anti-bias interventions
“Improving job access is essential,” says co-author Andrew Penner, professor of sociology at the University of California, Irvine. “This means addressing the barriers that keep immigrants out of the highest-paying firms and occupations.”
As of 2023, immigrants constituted approximately 14% of the U.S. population, totaling over 47 million people. There are approximately 1 million new long-term permanent residents annually. U.S. immigration policy encompasses diverse pathways, including family-based migration, employment-based visas, the Diversity Visa Lottery and humanitarian protection. Immigration has been a defining feature of the U.S. population since its founding, with distinct waves shaped by economic needs, political developments and global conflicts.
“For almost 250 years, we have been a nation of immigrants, and this pay gap indicates that we can do more as a country to help people following the paths of our forebears realize the American dream,” Tomaskovic-Devey adds.
Global Comparison
The study includes 13.5 million individuals in nine immigrant-receiving countries: the U.S., Canada, France, Germany, Denmark, Netherlands, Norway, Spain and Sweden.
The U.S. had one of the smallest pay gaps (10.6%) among the nine countries studied. By contrast, Canada showed a 27.5% gap and Spain a 29.3% gap. The most favorable outcomes for immigrants were in Sweden (7% gap) and Denmark (9.2%).
The authors identify two main sources of the immigrant-native pay gap:
Sorting—Immigrants are more likely to work in lower-paying industries, occupations and firms.
Within-job inequality—In all countries immigrants are paid less than natives doing the same job for the same employer, but these gaps are relatively small.
Across the nine countries, three-quarters of the 17.9% average wage gap for immigrants was due to sorting; just one-quarter stemmed from unequal pay within jobs. In the U.S., this pattern was consistent: structural job access—not wage discrimination—was the dominant force.
The study also exposes persistent disadvantages for immigrants from certain world regions, including Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and the Middle East. Across all countries, immigrants from these regions faced larger wage gaps than immigrants from Western or Asian countries.
The international research is the latest in a series of high-profile publications from a team spanning over a dozen countries in North America and Europe that has been investigating the dynamics of workplace earnings distributions for the last decade.
END
Immigrants in U.S. earn 10.6% less than native-born workers, but biggest driver is job access, not wage discrimination
UMass Amherst labor expert finds access to high-paying jobs—not unequal pay for the same job—is the biggest driver of immigrant wage gaps
2025-07-16
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New peer-reviewed study reveals severe health and economic consequences of 2025 Medicaid policy changes
2025-07-16
Waymark, a public benefit company dedicated to improving access and quality of care in Medicaid, today published peer-reviewed research in JAMA Health Forum examining the projected health system and economic impacts of 2025 Medicaid policy changes. The study, conducted in collaboration with researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, reveals that H.R. 1, the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" recently passed by Congress, could result in devastating consequences for vulnerable populations, rural communities, and local economies nationwide.
Numerous studies from multiple organizations, including the nonpartisan ...
Faster, smarter, more open: a new way to accelerate AI models
2025-07-16
Just as people from different countries speak different languages, AI models also create various internal “languages” – a unique set of tokens understood only by each model. Until recently, there was no way for models developed by different companies to communicate directly, collaborate or combine their strengths to improve performance. This week, at the International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML) in Vancouver, Canada, scientists from the Weizmann Institute of Science and Intel Labs are presenting a ...
What does it cost an animal to fight?
2025-07-16
How do animals decide when to fight and when to walk, fly, slither, or swim away? Most research on animal conflict has focused on the short-term costs of single interactions, but a pair of behavioral ecologists argue that these one-time events might paint an incomplete picture. In an opinion paper publishing July 16 in the Cell Press journal Trends in Ecology & Evolution, the researchers say that to really understand the consequences of animal conflict, we need to also consider its long-term and cumulative impact on an individual’s longevity and reproduction.
“By linking individual contests to lifetime reproductive success, we ...
Discovery could battle Alzheimer’s by boosting blood flow to brain
2025-07-16
New University of Virginia School of Medicine research suggests an unexpected way doctors may be able to improve blood flow to the brain to battle Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases.
Scientists led by Ukpong B. Eyo, PhD, of UVA’s Department of Neuroscience, found that immune cells called microglia play an essential role in determining how well tiny capillaries deliver blood and essential nourishment to our brains. The scientists believe problems with these microglia could be contributing to failing brain health, and targeting them could help us prevent or reverse memory-stealing diseases caused or worsened by lack of adequate blood flow. This could include Alzheimer’s, ...
New antibody selectively targets immune cells that suppress anti-tumor responses
2025-07-16
“Taken together, our studies suggest that 2B010 represents an anti-CD25 mAb with unique properties in that it deleted Treg from an inflammatory environment (GVHD) as well as from the TME.”
BUFFALO, NY – July 16, 2025 – A new research paper was published in Volume 16 of Oncotarget on July 9, 2025, titled “A novel anti-human CD25 mAb with preferential reactivity to activated T regulatory cells depletes them from the tumor microenvironment.”
In this study, researchers from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, led by first author Maja ...
OHSU scientists develop tool that improves tissue cancer analysis
2025-07-16
Researchers have developed a powerful new tool that makes it easier to study the mix of cell types in human tissue, which is crucial for understanding diseases such as cancer.
Developed by researchers at Oregon Health & Science University’s Knight Cancer Institute, the tool, dubbed OmicsTweezer, uses advanced machine learning techniques to analyze biological data at a scale large enough to estimate the composition of cell types in a sample of tissue that may be taken from a biopsy. This process allows scientists to map the cellular makeup of tumors and surrounding tissues — an area ...
The 2025 World Cultural Council’s award winner is announced
2025-07-16
The 2025 World Cultural Council’s award winner is announced
The winner of the 2025 “Albert Einstein” World Award of Science is Professor Mercouri G. Kanatzidis, Charles E. and Emma H. Morrison Professor in the Department of Chemistry and the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at Northwestern University, USA. He is also a Senior Scientist at Argonne National Laboratory.
Professor Kanatzidis is recognized for his groundbreaking contributions as a pioneer in shaping the field solar photovoltaic materials through his seminal work on halide perovskite semiconductors. He has made fundamental contributions for creating materials enabling ...
Stephenson Global Scholar Grants Program awards $5.3 million to drive breakthroughs in pancreatic cancer research
2025-07-16
The significant philanthropic support comes at a time of uncertainty for federal research funding
The grants will support new approaches to the deadliest cancer, from novel early detection methods, using AI to identify those with higher risk, and new immunotherapy treatments
LOS ANGELES, July 16, 2025 — The Stephenson Global Pancreatic Cancer Research Institute and its partner City of Hope, one of the country’s largest and most advanced cancer research and treatment organizations, today announced the six inaugural recipients of the prestigious Stephenson Scholar Grants, awarding $5.25 million to support high-impact research aimed at transforming the understanding, ...
A statement from the Global Virus Network (GVN) on the rapidly escalating measles crisis in the U.S. and worldwide
2025-07-16
Tampa, FL, USA - The Global Virus Network (GVN), a coalition of leading human and animal virologists from 80+ Centers of Excellence and Affiliates in more than 40 countries, is sounding the alarm over a sharp resurgence of measles cases in the United States and globally. This resurgence, fueled by falling vaccination rates, threatens to erode decades of public health progress.
Measles is one of the most contagious viruses known to humans and is entirely preventable through routine vaccination. The U.S. is now experiencing its highest ...
Restored wetlands reap benefits for climate, drought-resilience after just one year: study
2025-07-16
Reviving floodplain wetlands slashes carbon emissions by 39% and restores critical ecosystem functions in one year – without the methane spike typically seen in restored peatlands, a new study has found.
Peatlands are known as top carbon sinks, but can produce up to 530% more methane after restoration, potentially offsetting short-term climate benefits.
Whereas floodplain, or riparian wetlands, which comprise over half of global wetlands, are often overlooked due to their lower carbon storage.
Now a new study in the Journal of Environmental ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Off-the-shelf cancer vaccine elicits strong immune response in patients with pancreatic and colorectal cancer
New strategy to boost the effect of immunotherapy in the most aggressive form of lung cancer
Counties with animal feeding operations have more air pollution, less health insurance coverage
Mirror-like graphite films break records in strength and conductivity
AI uncovers new antibiotics in ancient microbes
AI meets CRISPR for precise gene editing
New method to synthesize carbohydrates could pave the way to biomedical advances
Plants feed through one-way routes
3D-printed kidney tumors show potential for more targeted treatment
Cats with dementia share hallmarks of humans with Alzheimer’s
AI could soon detect early voice box cancer from the sound of your voice
New survey reveals top reasons why kids avoid going to school
Playtime a mostly mutual activity between dolphins and whales
Brain cells learn faster than machine learning, new research reveals
Mixed-dimensional nanowires/nanosheet heterojunction of GaSb/Bi2O2Se for self-powered near-infrared photodetection and photocommunication
Universities that eliminated admission test requirements saw gains in student body diversity
Head-to-head against AI, pharmacy students won
Only some emotions help posts go viral
Predicting risk in children with heart defects
Test performance improves when children can exercise briefly beforehand, UNCG researchers find
Meet IDEA: An AI assistant to help geoscientists explore Earth and beyond
Ready for market: New process boosts clean, cost-efficient chemical production
Losing weight before IVF may increase chance of pregnancy
New study uncovers how genetics and lifestyle drive the heart disease dilated cardiomyopathy
City of Hope study shows childhood cancer survivors face new health problems later in life
An innovative system that dehydrates fruit without heat
The Optica Foundation names Cara Green Executive Director of Development
Is the 'love hormone,' oxytocin, also the 'friendship hormone'?
Global Virus Network reaffirms support for mRNA vaccines and collaborative vaccine research
Unpacking chaos to protect your morning coffee
[Press-News.org] Immigrants in U.S. earn 10.6% less than native-born workers, but biggest driver is job access, not wage discriminationUMass Amherst labor expert finds access to high-paying jobs—not unequal pay for the same job—is the biggest driver of immigrant wage gaps