1 / 19

The Labour Market Integration of Immigrants in OECD Countries

Explore labor market integration of immigrants in OECD countries, comparing employment outcomes and wage differentials with natives. Investigate policy effects on integration, emphasizing cross-country differences. Analyze data from EU, US, Australia, and Canada.

shirleylane
Download Presentation

The Labour Market Integration of Immigrants in OECD Countries

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Labour Market Integration of Immigrants in OECD Countries on-going work for OECD's Working Party 1, EPCpresented by Sébastien Jean (OECD) Workshop on the Economic Integration of Immigrants OECD, 29 May 2006

  2. Motivation • Integration is a widely shared priority… • But poor labour market outcomes of immigrants, compared to natives

  3. Unemployment is higher among immigrants than among natives…. Uimmig = 2 x Unatives Uimmig = Unatives

  4. … even when computed for low skilled males only Uimmig = 2 x Unatives Uimmig = Unatives

  5. Motivation (2) • Immigrants often fare worse than natives (in employment and/or wages), for comparable characteristics: imperfect labour market integration • How does labour market integration compare across countries? • Are immigrants absorbed into employment? Higher risk of inactivity and/or unemployment? “Wage rebate“? • How is integration linked to policy settings on product and labour markets? • How do structural policies interact with integration?

  6. Key points • Sizeable cross-country differences in the degree and nature of labour market integration of immigrants • Lesser wage gap tends to be associated with higher employment gap • Employment gap more persistent (?) • Integration can be related to product and labour market policies: • Some policy effects seem to be magnified for immigrants • Immigrants tend to suffer disproportionately from labour market dualism

  7. Outline • The approach • Data and implementation • Results by country and across-countries • Preliminary conclusions

  8. What can be learned from the literature? • Mainly focused on wages in the US (Chiswick, 1978, Borjas, 1985, 1995), but also some evidence on employment in Europe (Zimmermann Constant eds., 2004, ongoing work in OECD-ELS, 2004-05) • Is there a difference between immigrants and natives, once controlled for observable characteristics? • Main findings: • Immigrants earn less than natives in the US (wage diff ~ 20% on average), but they catch up over time • In European countries, immigrants display higher risk of being unemployed • Explanations: language, unobserved skills (self-selection), social capital, legal obstacles, imperfect skills transferability, discrimination

  9. Our approach • Analyse differences across comparable immigrants and natives in activity rates / employment rates / wage rates • Control for human capital and socioeconomic characteristics at the individual level • Step 1- Carry out similar analysis, country by country • Step 2- Jointly study all countries, and relate immigrants-natives differences to policies on the product and labour market

  10. Estimation Framework • Step 1 (country by country): • separately for males and females • X: experience, squared experience, marital status, educational attainment • Immig: dummies for migration background (+ EU/nonEU if appl.), +/- 10 years since migration) • Step 2 (across countries, with policy variables) • Pol: product and labour market policies

  11. The Data • Individual data (longitudinal household surveys) comparable across countries • EU15 Countries: ECHP data • standardised annual longitudinal survey, European Union, common questionnaire • 7 waves (from 1994 to 2001). • US: PSID, longitudinal household data (1997-2001) • Australia: HILDA, longitudinal household data (2001-2003) • Canada: SLID, longitudinal household data (1996-2001, not in this presentation)

  12. Implementation • Immigrants defined by country of birth • In EU countries, treat separately EU15/ non-EU 15 • In Australia, treat separately anglo-saxon countries • Use nationality for Germany • Duration of stay in the country = key variable • But data limitations do not allow much inference about assimilation • Separate +/- 10 years since migration • Not possible in the US data • Correct for non-random sample selection into activity and into employment based on observables and unobservables (Heckman, 1979)

  13. Limitations • Conceptual • Impossible to control for all factors of cross-country differences: integration policies, immigration motive, immigrants unobserved skills (linked to migration policy, country income and inequality, geography, history!)… • Return-migration bias • Statistical • Limited sample if immigrants: weak representativeness, clustered on a short period, cohort effects (although longitudinal), nb obs insufficient to use language and endogamy variables • Attrition bias + under-representation of recently-arrived immigrants

  14. Estimates by country: Employment gap versus wage gap among “recently arrived”, active immigrants

  15. Employment gap vs. wage gap at least 10 years after migration

  16. Cross-country integration differences and (product and) labour market policies • Not the only explanation (integration policies etc.) • But product and labour market policies may help explain how immigrants fare because • Different distribution of individual productivity • Different behaviour (reservation wage, location choices) • Less social capital • Discriminated against

  17. Cross-country differences and policies

  18. Illustrative evidence: precariousness and immigrants • Holds in a regression context: higher risk of precarious contract among recently arrived immigrants (conditional on being employed, when individual observable characteristics are controlled for)

  19. Preliminary conclusions • Work still in progress • Immigrants = “fragile” population: need to limit perverse effects • Think of integration in a dynamic setting: differences, but also rhythm of assimilation • Role of integration policies, targeted policies

More Related