| Literature DB >> 27493995 |
Jens Hainmueller1, Dominik Hangartner2, Duncan Lawrence3.
Abstract
European governments are struggling with the biggest refugee crisis since World War II, but there exists little evidence regarding how the management of the asylum process affects the subsequent integration of refugees in the host country. We provide new causal evidence about how one central policy parameter, the length of time that refugees wait in limbo for a decision on their asylum claim, affects their subsequent economic integration. Exploiting exogenous variation in wait times and registry panel data covering refugees who applied in Switzerland between 1994 and 2004, we find that one additional year of waiting reduces the subsequent employment rate by 4 to 5 percentage points, a 16 to 23% drop compared to the average rate. This deleterious effect is remarkably stable across different subgroups of refugees stratified by gender, origin, age at arrival, and assigned language region, a pattern consistent with the idea that waiting in limbo dampens refugee employment through psychological discouragement, rather than a skill atrophy mechanism. Overall, our results suggest that marginally reducing the asylum waiting period can help reduce public expenditures and unlock the economic potential of refugees by increasing employment among this vulnerable population.Entities:
Keywords: Asylum policy; employment; immigration; integration; refugee
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27493995 PMCID: PMC4972466 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1600432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Adv ISSN: 2375-2548 Impact factor: 14.136
Longer asylum wait times lower the probability of subsequent employment for refugees.
Regression coefficients with robust SEs in parentheses. Outcome is measured as 100 for employed and 0 for not employed so that effects are in percentage points. All regressions include fixed effects for gender, age, quarter of residency, religion, ethnicity, and canton. Models 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, and 10 also include fixed effects for origin and week of entry. Models 2, 5, 8, and 11 also include fixed effects for each origin × week of entry combination. Models 1 and 2 refer to all refugees. Models 3 to 5, 6 to 8, and 9 to 11 are restricted to refugees for which 1, 2, or 3 years are observed before the asylum decision, respectively.
| Outcome | Employed ( | ||||||||||
| Sample mean | 21.17 | 24.38 | 28.35 | 31.71 | |||||||
| Wait time (years) | −4.87 | −3.43 | −4.64 | −4.79 | −3.63 | −5.86 | −6.14 | −5.04 | −9.48 | −9.84 | −7.12 |
| Employed ( | 48.27 | 48.72 | 45.86 | 47.39 | 44.57 | 45.30 | |||||
| Employed ( | 11.49 | 6.81 | 12.60 | 8.61 | |||||||
| Employed ( | 2.80 | 2.24 | |||||||||
| 17,360 | 13,877 | 9108 | 5437 | ||||||||
| Employed Δ (%) | −23.01 | −16.21 | −19.04 | −19.67 | −14.90 | −20.65 | −21.65 | −17.78 | −29.90 | −31.04 | −22.46 |
| Additional fixed effects | |||||||||||
| Origin (# 96) | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||||
| Week of entry (# 572) | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||||
| Origin × week of | x | x | x | x | |||||||
Fig. 1Longer asylum wait times decrease the probability of subsequent employment for refugees, and this negative effect is stable across elapsed wait times.
Point estimates (black solid line) and 95% confidence intervals (blue ribbon) for the effect of a 1-year increase in the asylum wait time on the probability of subsequent employment depending on how many months a refugee has already waited for his or her asylum decision (n = 17,360) are shown. Effect estimates based on locally weighted kernel regressions with Epanechnikov kernel (bandwidth, 2). Regressions control for gender, age, and fixed effects for week of entry, origin, quarter of residency, religion, ethnicity, and canton. pp, percentage point.
Fig. 2Longer asylum wait times decrease the probability of subsequent employment for various subgroups of refugees stratified by gender, origin continent, age at arrival, and assigned language region.
Point estimates and 95% confidence intervals for the effect of a 1-year increase in the asylum wait time are shown. Estimates are based on ordinary least squares regression with robust SEs. Regressions include fixed effects for gender, age, week of entry, origin, religion, ethnicity, canton, and quarter of residency.
Fig. 3Wait times for asylum decision vary by origin country and month of arrival.
The average wait times for the asylum decision in days by month of arrival for refugees from the top six sending countries.