How middle-skilled workers adjust to immigration: the role of occupational skill specificity
International Journal of Manpower
ISSN: 0143-7720
Article publication date: 16 July 2024
Issue publication date: 30 September 2024
Abstract
Purpose
Our study explores the effects of immigration on the employment of native middle-skilled workers, focusing on how this effect varies with the specificity of their occupational skill bundles.
Design/methodology/approach
Exploiting the 2002 opening of the Swiss labor market to EU workers and using register data on the location and occupation of these workers, our findings provide novel results on the labor market effects of immigration.
Findings
We show that the inflow of EU workers led to an increase in the employment of native middle-skilled workers with highly specific occupational skills. This finding could be attributed to immigrant workers reducing existing skill gaps, enhancing the quality of job-worker matches, and alleviating firms' capacity restrictions. This allowed firms to create new jobs, thereby providing increased employment options for middle-skilled workers with highly specialized skills.
Originality/value
Previous literature has predominantly highlighted the disadvantages of specific occupational skills compared to general skills in the context of labor market shocks. However, our findings reveal that workers with specific occupational skills can benefit from an immigration-driven labour market shock. These results suggest that policy conclusions regarding the role of specific occupational skills should be more nuanced.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
This study was partly funded by the Swiss State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation through its “Leading House VPET-ECON: A Research Center on the Economics of Education, Firm Behavior and Training Policies.” We would like to thank Simone Balestra, Andreas Beerli, Eric Bettinger, David Dorn, Simon Janssen, Edward Lazear, Guido Schwerdt, Martina Viarengo, participants at the CVER Conference 2019, seminar participants at the University of Zurich, and at the Stanford Graduate School of Education for their valuable comments on this as well as earlier versions of this study. We would also like to thank Marco Pereira for his excellent research assistance.
Citation
Pregaldini, D. and Backes-Gellner, U. (2024), "How middle-skilled workers adjust to immigration: the role of occupational skill specificity", International Journal of Manpower, Vol. 45 No. 8, pp. 1607-1625. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-09-2023-0519
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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