
handle: 10419/308303 , 10419/308781
While Western countries worry about labor shortages, their institutional barriers to skill transferability prevent immigrants from fully utilizing foreign qualifications. Combining administrative and survey data in a difference-in-differences design, we show that a German reform, which lifted these barriers for non-EU immigrants, led to a 15 percent increase in the share of immigrants with a recognized foreign qualification. Consequently, non-EU immigrants’ employment and wages in licensed occupations (e.g., doctors) increased respectively by 18.6 and 4 percent, narrowing the gaps with EU immigrants. Despite the inflow of non-EU immigrants in these occupations, we find no evidence of crowding out or downward wage pressure for natives.
Occupational Recognition, Immigrant Integration, skill transferability, ddc:330, J24, J62, F22, J31, occupational recognition, immigrant integration, Skill Transferability
Occupational Recognition, Immigrant Integration, skill transferability, ddc:330, J24, J62, F22, J31, occupational recognition, immigrant integration, Skill Transferability
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