How Immigration Grease Is Affected by Economic, Institutional and Policy Contexts: Evidence from EU Labor Markets

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Authors

GUZI Martin MÝTNA KUREKOVÁ Lucia KAHANEC Martin

Year of publication 2015
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source IZA Discussion Paper
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Economics and Administration

Citation
web IZA DP 9108
Field Economy
Keywords labor supply; skill matching; migration; labor shortage; welfare state; institutions; policy
Attached files
Description Theoretical arguments and previous country-level evidence indicate that immigrants are more fluid than natives in responding to changing labor shortages across countries, skill-groups or industries. The diversity across EU member states enables us to test this hypothesis across various institutional, economic and policy contexts. Drawing on the EU LFS and EU SILC datasets we study the relationship between residual wage premia as a measure of labor shortages in different skill-industry-country cells and the shares of migrants and natives working in these cells. We find that immigrants' responsiveness to labor market shortages exceeds that of natives in the EU15, in particular in member states with higher unemployment rates, higher levels of (recent) immigration, and more open immigration and integration policies; but also those with barriers to citizenship acquisition or family reunification. Whereas higher welfare expenditures seem to exert a lock-in effect, a comparison across different types of welfare states indicates that institutional complementarities neutralize that effect.
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