Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T02:26:18.819Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Immigrant Performance and Selective Immigration Policy: A European Perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2020

Amelie Constant
Affiliation:
IZA, Bonn
Klaus F. Zimmermann*
Affiliation:
Bonn University, IZA Bonn and DIW Berlin

Abstract

The European Union aims at a stronger participation by its population in work to foster growth and welfare. There are concerns about the attachment of immigrants to the labour force, and discussions about the necessary policy responses. Integrated labour and migration policies are needed. The employment chances of the low-skilled are limited. Whereas Europe could benefit from a substantive immigration policy that imposes selection criteria that are more in line with economic needs, the substantial immigration into the European Union follows largely non-economic motives. This paper discusses the economic rationale of a selective immigration policy and provides empirical evidence about the adverse effects of current selection mechanisms.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2005 National Institute of Economic and Social Research

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

Financial support from Volkswagen Foundation for the IZA project on ‘The economics and persistence of migrant ethnicity’ is gratefully acknowledged. We wish to thank the Rockwool Foundation Research Unit, especially Claus Larsen, Marie Louise Schultz-Nielsen, Niels-Kenneth Nielsen and Torben Tranaes, and Statistics Denmark in Copenhagen for valuable help with the Danish part of the data set used in this study during research visits in May and June 2005. We also thank John Ermisch and a referee for helpful comments on an earlier draft.

References

Bauer, T., Dietz, B., Zimmermann, K.F. and Zwintz, E. (2005), ‘German migration: development, assimilation, and labour market effects’, in: Zimmermann, K.F. (ed.), European Migration: What Do We Know?, Oxford, Oxford University Press, pp. 197261.Google Scholar
Bauer, T., Lofstrom, M. and Zimmermann, K.F. (2000), ‘Immigration policy, assimilation of immigrants and natives’ sentiments towards immigrants: evidence from 12 OECD countries’, Swedish Economic Policy Review, 7, pp. 1153.Google Scholar
Bauer, T. and Zimmermann, K.F. (1997), ‘Integrating the east: the labour market effects of immigration’, in Black, S.W. (ed.), Europe's Economy Looks East - Implications for Germany and the European Union, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, pp. 269306.Google Scholar
Bauer, T. and Nielsen, N.-K. (2004), ‘Data description,’ in Tranaes, T. and Zimmermann, K.F. (ed.), Migrants, Work, and the Welfare State, Odense, University Press of Southern Denmark, pp. 405427.Google Scholar
Boeri, T., Hanson, G. and McCormick, B. (2002), Immigration Policy and the Welfare System, Oxford, Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Borjas, G.J. (1994), ‘The economics of immigration,Journal of Economic Literature, 32, pp. 16671717.Google Scholar
Commission of the European Communities (2005), Green Paper on an EU Approach to Managing Economic Migration, Brussels.Google Scholar
Constant, A. and Schultz-Nielsen, M.L. (2004a), ‘Labour force participation and unemployment: incentives and preferences,’ in Tranaes, T. and Zimmermann, K.F. (eds), Migrants, Work, and the Welfare State, Odense, University Press of Southern Denmark, pp. 147186.Google Scholar
Constant, A. and Schultz-Nielsen, M.L. (2004b), ‘Immigrant selection and earnings’, in Tranaes, T. and Zimmermann, K.F. (eds), Migrants, Work, and the Welfare State, Odense, University Press of Southern Denmark, pp. 147186.Google Scholar
Constant, A. and Zimmermann, K.F. (2005), ‘The making of entrepreneurs in Germany: are native men and immigrants alike?’, Small Business Economics (forthcoming).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
European Communities (2003), Employment in Europe 2003. Recent Trends and Prospects, Luxembourg, Office for Official Publications of the European Communities.Google Scholar
Petersen, P.J. (2005), ‘Migration in’, in Zimmermann, K.F. (ed.), European Migration: What Do We Know?, Oxford, Oxford University Press, pp. 59112.Google Scholar
Sapir Report (2004), André Sapir, Philippe Aghion, Giuseppe Bertola, Martin Hellwig, Jean Pisani-Ferry, Dariusz Rosati, José Vinals, Helen Wallace, An Agenda for a Growing Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Schultz-Nielsen, M.L. and Constant, A. (2004), ‘Employment trends for immigrants and natives’, in Tranaes, T. and Zimmermann, K.F. (eds), Migrants, Work, and the WelfareState, Odense, University Press of Southern Denmark, pp. 119146.Google Scholar
Tranaes, T. and Zimmermann, K.F. (2004a), Migrants, Work, and the Welfare State, Odense, University Press of Southern Denmark.Google Scholar
Tranaes, T. and Zimmermann, K.F. (2004b), ‘Migrants, work, and the welfare state: an introduction’, in Tranaes, T. and Zimmermann, K.F. (eds), Migrants, Work, and the Welfare State, Odense, University Press of Southern Denmark, pp. 1529.Google Scholar
Veall, M.R. and Zimmermann, K.F. (1994), ‘Goodness of fit measures in the Tobit model’, Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 56, pp. 485496.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Venturini, A. (2004), Post-War Migration in Southern Europe. An Economic Approach, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Zimmermann, K.F. (1995), ‘European migration: push and pull’, Proceedings of the World Bank Annual Conference on Development Economics 1994, World Bank Economic Review, and World Bank Research Observer, pp. 313342.Google Scholar
Zimmermann, K.F. (ed.) (2005), European Migration: What Do We Know?, Oxford, Oxford University Press.Google Scholar