When children of immigrants come of age. A longitudinal perspective on labour market outcomes in Switzerland

Gomensoro, Andrés; Bolzman, Claudio (June 2019). When children of immigrants come of age. A longitudinal perspective on labour market outcomes in Switzerland (TREE Working Paper Series 2). Bern: TREE (Transitions from Education to Employment)

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Migration during childhood has a negative impact on educational outcomes. As a result, migrant youths enter the labour market with lower educational assets and experience obstacles and delayed transitions. Even so, little is known about later labour-market outcomes of youth who migrated to Switzerland during childhood and attended post-compulsory education there. Are there differences with respect to the labour-market outcomes for these young adults, and do these differences persist once we account for educational attainment and other relevant characteristics? For a longitudinal analysis of these research questions, we draw on panel data of the first TREE (Transitions from Education to Employment) co-hort. With reference to descriptives of their educational and labour market situation, we propose a number of explanatory models to predict the effect of migration characteristics while controlling for relevant characteristics including educational attainment. We consider the effect of three variables related to migration: respondents’ country of birth, respondents’ nationality and parental country of birth. Our results show that, in a longitudinal perspective, those who migrated during childhood experience higher risk of unemployment, are to be found in lower occupational positions and have lower incomes than native youths. While some differences can be explained by the lower level of education of those born abroad, this is not the case for other differences such as income differentials. Moreover, some effects vary by type of migration characteristics (respondent’s country of birth, parental country of birth and respondent’s nationality) or appear only in a longitudinal perspective, thereby underlining the necessity of framing migration multidimensionally and relying on panel data.

Item Type:

Working Paper

Division/Institute:

03 Faculty of Business, Economics and Social Sciences > Social Sciences > Institute of Sociology

UniBE Contributor:

Gomensoro, Andrés, Bolzman, Claudio

Subjects:

300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology

Series:

TREE Working Paper Series

Publisher:

TREE (Transitions from Education to Employment)

Projects:

[1036] Transitions from Education to Employment (TREE) Official URL

Language:

English

Submitter:

Thomas Meyer

Date Deposited:

13 Jun 2019 15:12

Last Modified:

05 Dec 2023 11:35

BORIS DOI:

10.7892/boris.131250

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/131250

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