Immigrant Naturalisation, Employment and Occupational Status in Western Europe

Rezart Hoxhaj*, Maarten Vink, Tijana Breuer

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Does citizenship facilitate access to employment and higher status jobs? Existing studies have produced mixed results across mostly single case studies in Europe and North America. To investigate whether this heterogeneity depends on varying institutional and socio-economic conditions, in this paper we analyse the labour market outcomes of immigrants who have naturalised in 13 West European countries. Our empirical analysis draws on data from the 2014 European Labour Force Survey Ad Hoc Module on immigrants. In order to cope with the selective nature of the naturalisation process, we employ a bivariate probit model that accounts for unobserved characteristics of naturalising immigrants. Our main results show a positive relationship across these destination countries between citizenship and the probability of employment, as well as between citizenship and occupational status, but only for immigrant men from developing countries. For women and formigrants fromdeveloped countries, we observe no significant differences between citizens and non-citizens. Liberalising the access to citizenship does not diminish the positive returns on employment from naturalisation. For immigrant men from developing countries there is evidence of a trade-off between easier access to citizenship and the returns on occupational status.
Original languageEnglish
Article number70
Number of pages11
JournalFrontiers in Sociology
Volume5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 Dec 2020

Keywords

  • citizenship
  • employment
  • occupational status
  • Western Europe
  • citizenship policy
  • LABOR-MARKETS
  • BIVARIATE PROBIT
  • CITIZENSHIP
  • INTEGRATION
  • IDENTIFICATION
  • MIGRATION
  • EARNINGS
  • GERMANY
  • FRANCE
  • IMPACT

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