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Irregular employment of foreigners in Hungary. Judit Juhász. Panta Rhei Social Research Bt. Budapest Tel./fax: +(36-1) 200-1942 E-mail: juhasz@hungarnet.hu. Debates related to migration.
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Irregular employment of foreigners in Hungary Judit Juhász Panta Rhei Social Research Bt. Budapest Tel./fax: +(36-1) 200-1942 E-mail: juhasz@hungarnet.hu
Debates related to migration In the last two decades the socio-economic and political importance of international migration (including illegal forms) increased, thus the importance of the research. Focal points of debates: • Evaluation of economic, social and political significance • Legal/illegal forms • Regulation • Possibilities of measurement, use of quantitative (hard) and/or soft qualitative methods
Employment of foreigners • I. Methodological challenge (Definitions, measurement) • II. Legal background, regular/irregular • III. Foreigners in the Hungarian labour market (situation description and analysis) Key questions and some results
I.Methodological challenge Need for measurement meeting rigorous scientific standards Nature and complexity of the topic and the illegality itself makes impossible exact measurement Debate: • Possibility (if any)and means of measurement • Qualitative / quantitative approaches • Need for methodological diversity Contradiction: political, administrative requirements – research possibilities
Problems of definition, terminology Diversity of definitions different estimates Lack of elaborated methodology conceptual uncertainity
Illegal/irregular migrantworker • Legal category • Economic determination • socio-demographicinterpretation Same activity might be qualified/classified differently
Basic Considerations • Methodological diversity gives better chance to differentiated description of illegal migration, to understand the root causes and processes • Infiltration of direct political intentions and prejudices to research hypothesis, methods and conclusions must be avoided
Methods • Collection, systematisation and analysis of existing information (research results, statistical and administrative data, of press and document analysis) Data sources I. Registers • Illegal border crossings • Other illegal acts connected to migration (crimes, criminal offences) • Data on labour control II. Empirical research • Observation • In depth interviews, conversation with key informants • Interviews with migrants, case studies • Content analysis • Document analysis, videos, photos • Cartographic methods • Standard questionnaires
II. Legal rules • Work permit • EU citizens • Occasional agricultural employment • Labour control
Work permit • Request by the employer • Labour requirement report • Is there domestic (EU) labour force? (30 days) • Obtaining other documents (proof of qualification, visa, residence permit, occupational medical certificate) • Validity • For given employer, occupation and place • Maximum 1 year
Workers from the EU • Free movement of workers (only registration is needed) • From EU 15: • United Kingdom • Sweden • Ireland • Spain • Portugal • Finland • New EU members • Reciprocity
Occasional labour • Since August 2005. special simplified rules (only for agricultural seasonal work, for a maximum of 60 days/year) • But • seasonal visa is required (maximum for 72 days/year, 30 EUR) • Travel (visa at home, occasional labour booklet in Hungary) Still too complicated!!! Farmers’ recommendation: all administration locally
Labour control • Fine for employer>=8 * minimal wage • Jan-Apr 2006.: 11 139 irregular worker, of which foreigners: 388 without work permit 1 164 other irregularity • Labour control • Targeted control • Sectors(for example: construction, agriculture) • Thematic (for example: without registration/permit) • Notification/denunciation (neighbours, competitors)
II. Foreigners in the Hungarian labour marketSituation –description and analysis Questions: • How many, who (where from,personal characteristics) • Work (activity, qualification, recruitment, working conditions, wages, employers) • Why? Advantages/disadvantages: • of employing foreigners • of working abroad (in Hungary) • From the perspectives of other actors
Types of foreigners working in Hungary By occupational qualification: • Blue/white collar worker (unqualified/qualified) • Professionals/intellectuals By length of employment: Permanent employee – occasional, seasonal worker By legal status: Regular – irregular By sending countries, nationalities By personal, demographic characteristics
Foreigners in the Hungarian labour marketSignificance and effects • Do they take away jobs from Hungarians? • Effect on wages • Filling in labour shortages (certain jobs, qualifications)
Advantages and disadvantages Advantages and disadvantages • Motivation • Wages • Culture • Mobility • Possible conflicts (locals – foreigners) • Difficulties in communication • Lack of local knowledge • Uncertainty on the long run
I. Data from registers Immigration (1990-2005) Source: Office for Immigration and Nationality
Applications for permanent residence permits by citizenship, 1996–2005 Source: Office for Immigration and Nationality
Economically active foreigners Source: HCSO, National Employment Office, Office for Immigration and Nationality
Labour migration (permit holders) Source: National Employment Office
Employment by sectors Source: HCSO, National Employment Office
Illegal border crossings by directions 1990-2004 Source: Border Guards
II. Some results of empirical researches and lessons learnt In-depth interviews MIGIWE (2006) experts (35) migrants (35) Standard interviewsIrregular labour (ILO, 1998-99)
1. Income compared to Hungarians --- MALE --- --- FEMALE --- ALTOGETHER
2. Do you think there is any discrimination against foreigners:
3. Does your present work match your qualification?(answers according to highest degree of education)
Visual documents Labour control
Accommodation of Romanian irregular workers at the edge of Budapest
The accommodation inside „They are rather grateful for it ”
International cooperation should be strenghtened to • exploit the gained experiences and the advantages of common thinking • develop the theory and praxis of migration research • establish international standards