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US and them: Job quality differences between natives and immigrants in Europe
[journal article]
Abstract Using microdata from the European Union Labour Force Survey (EU-LFS) and aggregate indicators of labour market institutions, this article compares the job quality of native and non-native workers across European countries and analyses the impact of the institutional settings on the job quality diffe... view more
Using microdata from the European Union Labour Force Survey (EU-LFS) and aggregate indicators of labour market institutions, this article compares the job quality of native and non-native workers across European countries and analyses the impact of the institutional settings on the job quality differential between both groups. The LFS is used to measure a job quality index for the period 2005-2017. We find that some immigrant groups fare worse than natives, the contribution of the "composition effect" to explain this differential is large, and the institutional framework affects the immigration gap in job quality. In particular, some labour market institutions (more centralized wage bargaining, stricter employment protection legislation) tend to be detrimental for immigrants relative to natives, while integration policies seem to work well in reducing these differences.... view less
Keywords
EU; EU citizen; EU member state; migrant; immigration; labor market; labor; quality; job; inequality
Classification
Sociology of Work, Industrial Sociology, Industrial Relations
Migration, Sociology of Migration
Free Keywords
immigrant workers; job quality; labour market institutions; EU-LFS 2005-2017
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 154-178
Journal
International Migration, 26 (2023) 1
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/imig.12998
ISSN
1468-2435
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0