Ethnic identity and labour market outcomes of immigrants in Europe
Journal article: We study the relationship between ethnic identity and labour market outcomes of non-EU immigrants in Europe. Using the European Social Survey, we find that there is a penalty to be paid for immigrants with a strong identity. Being a first generation immigrant leads to a penalty of about 17% while second-generation immigrants have a probability of being employed that is not statistically different from that of natives. However, when they have a strong identity, second-generation immigrants have a lower chance of finding a job than natives. Our analysis also reveals that the relationship between ethnic identity and employment prospects may depend on the type of integration and labour market policies implemented in the country where the immigrant lives. More flexible labour markets help immigrants to access the labour market but do not protect those who have a strong ethnic identity.
Author(s)
Alberto Bisin, Eleonora Patacchini, Thierry Verdier, Yves Zenou
Journal
- Economic Policy
Date of publication
- 2011
Keywords JEL
Keywords
- Ethnic identity
- First- and second-generation immigrants
- Integration policies
- Labor-market policies
Pages
- 57-92
URL of the HAL notice
Version
- 1
Volume
- 26