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Arthur Sakamoto

Researcher at Texas A&M University

Publications -  87
Citations -  2110

Arthur Sakamoto is an academic researcher from Texas A&M University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Earnings. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 82 publications receiving 1819 citations. Previous affiliations of Arthur Sakamoto include University of Texas at Austin & University of Wisconsin-Madison.

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Socioeconomic Attainments of Asian Americans

TL;DR: The authors found that Asian Americans tend to have higher mean levels of educational achievements, and several recent studies indicate approximate parity with whites in most arenas of the labor market for those Asian Americans who were schooled in the United States.
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The Rise of Intra-Occupational Wage Inequality in the United States, 1983 to 2002

TL;DR: This article investigated the relationship between wage inequality and occupational structure measured at the three-digit level using the Current Population Survey from 1983 to 2002, and found that the direct association between occupations and wage inequality declined over this period as within-occupational inequality grew faster than between-Occupational inequality.
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Education and Lifetime Earnings in the United States

TL;DR: The results confirm the persistent positive effects of higher education on earnings over different stages of the work career and over a lifetime, but also reveal notably smaller net effects on lifetime earnings compared with previously reported estimates.
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Duration or Disadvantage? Exploring Nativity, Ethnicity, and Health in Midlife

TL;DR: Although aging immigrants displayed worse health than the native-born population, this disadvantage was mediated by duration of residence (young age at migration) and socioeconomic incorporation.
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Have Asian American Men Achieved Labor Market Parity with White Men

TL;DR: The authors used the 2003 National Survey of College Graduates to investigate earnings differentials between white and Asian American men, and they extended prior literature by disaggregating Asian Americans by thei...