Education and Selection into Ethnic Identification: Evidence from Roma People in Romania
Working Paper 34383
DOI 10.3386/w34383
Issue Date
How does ethnic identification vary with education among disadvantaged minorities? We study this question for Roma people, Europe's largest ethnic minority, using linked Romanian census data and birth records. We measure how individuals change reported ethnicity over time, or “pass.” Roma identification strongly declines with education, from 80% for those with no education to 40% for postsecondary graduates. We estimate a model with persistent individual heterogeneity and find 3-6 times more Roma postsecondary graduates than in official data. Survey data we collect shows that most Romanians are unaware of these patterns. Such selective passing may reinforce stereotypes about marginalized groups.
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Copy CitationAndreea Mitrut, Gabriel Kreindler, Margareta Matache, Andrei Munteanu, and Cristian Pop-Eleches, "Education and Selection into Ethnic Identification: Evidence from Roma People in Romania," NBER Working Paper 34383 (2025), https://doi.org/10.3386/w34383.