Natives Sorting and the Impact of Immigration on European Labor Markets

Michal Burzynski, Giovanni Peri

Research output: Working paper

60 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

We analyze the implications of non-EU immigration for wage distribution and inequality among European workers, by focusing on their migration across local labor markets and within- and across-occupational mobility. To quantify the role of each channel, we build a multi-region, multi-occupation and multi-sector model of labor markets that replicates the regularities of labor mobility across spatial and occupational cells in Europe observed in the data. We find that non-EU immigration increases wages of the majority of European workers, while generating significant sorting across occupations (job upgrading) and inducing negative self-selection of natives into inactivity. The overall level of income inequality rises (especially the between-occupation component), fueled by natives’ mobility across jobs. The sorting of native workers across regions induced by immigration is of lesser importance for welfare and inequality, but shapes the spatial distribution of overall effects.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationEsch-sur-Alzette
PublisherLISER
Number of pages58
Publication statusPublished - 11 Nov 2024

Publication series

NameWorking papers
PublisherLISER
No.2024-09
ISSN (Electronic)2716-7445

Keywords

  • Immigration
  • Welfare
  • Sorting
  • Self-selection

LISER Collections

  • Les working papers du Liser

Cite this