‘Crowded out’? Immigration Surge and Residents’ Employment Outcomes in Norway

This study uses Norwegian public register data in a spatial correlation approach, and analyzes associations between regional variations in immigration and employment outcomes 2004–2015 in a cohort of adult residents (N = 1.3 million). A higher share of immigrants in the regional population and an i...

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Main Authors: Jon Ivar Elstad, Kristian Heggebø
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Aalborg University 2020-10-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/njwls/article/view/122596
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spelling doaj-00c9dee52c7744bd853d473fc9e0989c2020-11-25T04:08:38ZengAalborg UniversityNordic Journal of Working Life Studies2245-01572020-10-0110.18291/njwls.122596‘Crowded out’? Immigration Surge and Residents’ Employment Outcomes in NorwayJon Ivar Elstad0Kristian Heggebø1Oslo Metropolitan UniversityOslo Metropolitan University This study uses Norwegian public register data in a spatial correlation approach, and analyzes associations between regional variations in immigration and employment outcomes 2004–2015 in a cohort of adult residents (N = 1.3 million). A higher share of immigrants in the regional population and an immigrant population dominated by low-educated were associated with slightly negative work income trends and less employment opportunities for residents, in particular for low- educated natives and earlier immigrants. A steep increase in the immigrant share of the regional population was, on the other hand, associated with better employment outcomes for all analyzed resident categories. Overall, regional immigration differences were only modestly related to the out- comes. Findings indicate that the institutional context has limited the role of market mechanisms in the labor market, and a booming regional economy will tend to neutralize potentially negative effects of immigration on residents’ employment. https://tidsskrift.dk/njwls/article/view/122596Employment, Wages, Unemployment & RehabilitationLabor Market Institutions & Social Partners
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jon Ivar Elstad
Kristian Heggebø
spellingShingle Jon Ivar Elstad
Kristian Heggebø
‘Crowded out’? Immigration Surge and Residents’ Employment Outcomes in Norway
Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies
Employment, Wages, Unemployment & Rehabilitation
Labor Market Institutions & Social Partners
author_facet Jon Ivar Elstad
Kristian Heggebø
author_sort Jon Ivar Elstad
title ‘Crowded out’? Immigration Surge and Residents’ Employment Outcomes in Norway
title_short ‘Crowded out’? Immigration Surge and Residents’ Employment Outcomes in Norway
title_full ‘Crowded out’? Immigration Surge and Residents’ Employment Outcomes in Norway
title_fullStr ‘Crowded out’? Immigration Surge and Residents’ Employment Outcomes in Norway
title_full_unstemmed ‘Crowded out’? Immigration Surge and Residents’ Employment Outcomes in Norway
title_sort ‘crowded out’? immigration surge and residents’ employment outcomes in norway
publisher Aalborg University
series Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies
issn 2245-0157
publishDate 2020-10-01
description This study uses Norwegian public register data in a spatial correlation approach, and analyzes associations between regional variations in immigration and employment outcomes 2004–2015 in a cohort of adult residents (N = 1.3 million). A higher share of immigrants in the regional population and an immigrant population dominated by low-educated were associated with slightly negative work income trends and less employment opportunities for residents, in particular for low- educated natives and earlier immigrants. A steep increase in the immigrant share of the regional population was, on the other hand, associated with better employment outcomes for all analyzed resident categories. Overall, regional immigration differences were only modestly related to the out- comes. Findings indicate that the institutional context has limited the role of market mechanisms in the labor market, and a booming regional economy will tend to neutralize potentially negative effects of immigration on residents’ employment.
topic Employment, Wages, Unemployment & Rehabilitation
Labor Market Institutions & Social Partners
url https://tidsskrift.dk/njwls/article/view/122596
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AT kristianheggebø crowdedoutimmigrationsurgeandresidentsemploymentoutcomesinnorway
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