Abstract

Can specific policies support the economic integration of immigrants? Despite the crucial importance of this question, existing evidence is inconclusive. Using data from the European Social Survey, we estimate the effects of integration and anti-discrimination policies, alongside social expenditure and labor market regulation, on the labor market performance of 6,176 non-European immigrants across 23 European countries. We make three contributions: 1) we investigate the distinct role of discrete policy areas for labor market integration outcomes, 2) we allow for heterogeneous effects of policies on immigrants with different characteristics, and 3) we examine immigrants’ occupational attainment while accounting for their selection into employment. We find that immigrants’ employment chances are negatively associated with national levels of expenditure on welfare benefits but positively associated with policies facilitating immigrant access to social security. We also find that labor market rigidity is negatively associated with immigrants’ occupational attainment, but we find little evidence that policies aimed at supporting the transferability of immigrants’ qualifications promote their occupational success. Our results strongly suggest that anti-discrimination policies are important for immigrant economic integration. Yet while these policies are associated with greater occupational success for all female immigrants, they seem to be only positively associated with the occupational attainment of higher-skilled and non-Muslim immigrant men. As this article suggests, anti-discrimination policies can foster immigrants’ labor market success, yet these policies currently fail to reach those who face the strongest anti-immigrant sentiments — that is, unskilled male immigrants and Muslim immigrant men.

Highlights

  • Immigrants’ effective integration represents one of the key challenges facing European governments (Alba and Foner 2015)

  • We see that policies that facilitate immigrant access to social security are associated with higher employment rates and that there is no significant interaction between welfare expenditure and access to social security policies

  • Immigration to Europe from diverse societies has been posited as an important integration challenge (Alba and Foner 2015)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Immigrants’ effective integration represents one of the key challenges facing European governments (Alba and Foner 2015). Immigration can increase human capital, slow population aging, and foster economic growth, contributing to the sustainability of European welfare states (Peri 2011) It can fuel labor market competition and anti-immigrant sentiments (Davis and Deole 2019). Barriers to immigrant integration imply a waste of human capital (Engzell and Ichou 2019) and lower fiscal contributions (Dustmann and Frattini 2014), which can further undermine popular support for immigration (Hainmueller and Hopkins 2014). The scope of this integration challenge highlights the need for knowledge-based immigrant integration policies

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call