Explaining the relationship between socio-economic status and interethnic friendships: The mediating role of preferences, opportunities, and third parties
2021
Interethnic contact is important for social cohesion and has been shown to vary with people’s
socio-economic status (SES). There is some evidence that SES has opposite effects on interethnic
contact for non-Western ethnic minorities and for majority members in Western countries.
Whereas minority members with a higher SES tend to have more contact with natives, natives
with a higher SES tend to have less inter-ethnic contact. To replicate and further understand these
contrasting findings, we focused on interethnic friendships in particular and tested simultaneously
for majority and minority members whether preferences for cultural similarity, opportunities to
meet ethnic others, and disapproval of third parties, mediate the relationship between SES and
having interethnic friendships. Analyses of 368 natives and 267 non-Western ethnic minority
members in the Netherlands confirmed the contrasting effects of SES on interethnic friendships
for these two groups. Importantly, we found that for minority members higher SES was related to
more friendships with natives through more meeting opportunities. For natives, higher SES was
related to fewer friendships with ethnic minorities, however, this relationship could not be
explained by lower meeting opportunities. Preferences for cultural similarity and third-party
disapproval did not explain the link between SES and interethnic friendships for any of the
two groups.
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