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Managing Refugee Protection Crises: Policy Lessons from Economics and Political Science
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Communication Barriers and Infant Health: Intergenerational Effects of Randomly Allocating Refugees Across Language Regions
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Educational and Skills Mismatches among Immigrants: The Impact of Host Language Proficiency
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Home is where the heart is? How regional identity hinders internal migration in Germany
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Kremer, Anna. - : Dresden: Technische Universität Dresden, Center of Public and International Economics (CEPIE), 2020
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5 |
English Skills and Early Labour Market Integration of Humanitarian Migrants
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Personality Traits, Migration Intentions, and Cultural Distance
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Language Premium Myth or Fact: Evidence from Migrant Workers of Guangdong, China
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The Impact of Exposure to Missionaries on the English Language Proficiency and Earnings of Immigrants in the USA
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Are asylum seekers more likely to work with more inclusive labor market access regulations?
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Abstract:
In the face of recent refugee migration, early integration of asylum seekers into the labor market has been proposed as an important mechanism for easing their economic and social lot in the short as well as in the long term. However, little is known about the policies that foster or hamper their participation in the labor market, in particular during the important initial period of their stay in the host country. In order to evaluate whether inclusive labor market policies increase the labor market participation of asylum seekers, we exploit the variation in asylum policies in Swiss cantons to which asylum seekers are as good as randomly allocated. During our study period from 2011 to 2014, the employment rate among asylum seekers varied between 0% and 30.2% across cantons. Our results indicate that labor market access regulations are responsible for a substantial proportion of these differences, in which an inclusive regime increases participation by 11 percentage points. The marginal effects are larger for asylum seekers who speak a language that is linguistically close to the one in their host canton.
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Keyword:
Asylum policy; asylum seekers; ddc:330; economic integration; employment ban; F22; J15; J61; labor market access regulation
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10419/203161
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11 |
Do English Skills Affect Muslim Immigrants' Economic and Social Integration Differentially?
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Are asylum seekers more likely to work with more inclusive labor market access regulations?
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Deprivation, Segregation, and Socioeconomic Class of UK Immigrants: Does English Proficiency Matter?
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14 |
ifo Migrationsmonitor: Integration von Geflüchteten – Schlüsselfaktor Spracherwerb
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Immigrants Move Where Their Skills Are Scarce: Evidence from English Proficiency
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16 |
The Impact of Brexit on International Students' Return Intentions
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The relative labour market performance of former international students: Evidence from the Canadian National Graduates Survey
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18 |
Linguistic Distance, Networks and Migrants' Regional Location Choice
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19 |
Linguistic distance, networks and migrants' regional location choice
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