%0 Report %A Lee, Jun Yeong %A Winters, John V. %T Too Cold to Venture There? January Temperature and Immigrant Self-Employment across the United States %D 2021 %8 2021 Dec %I Institute of Labor Economics (IZA) %C Bonn %7 IZA Discussion Paper %N 14941 %U https://www.iza.org/publications/dp14941 %X Immigrant entrepreneurs are critical to regional and national economies. Immigrants in the USA have higher self-employment rates than natives, and immigrants have made outsized contributions as founders of numerous highly successful firms. However, we document that immigrant self-employment rates vary considerably across areas of the USA. Our main measure is the percentage of immigrant workers in an area who are self-employed; i.e., the self- employment rate for the foreign-born. Areas with colder winter temperatures have especially low self-employment rates among their immigrant populations compared to other areas of the USA. This relationship holds for numerous sub-samples of immigrants and is not driven by any particular group. The relationship persists after controlling for numerous individual and local area characteristics. Immigrant entrepreneurs appear to be especially forward-looking and responsive to warmer January temperature as a locational amenity. The results have important implications about the location choices of immigrant entrepreneurs. %K immigrants %K entrepreneurship %K self-employment %K amenities %K temperature