European Natives’ Attitudes Towards High-Skilled and Low-Skilled Immigrants: Evidence from the European Social Survey
Abstract
This paper aims to test whether the labor market competition channel and fiscal burden
channel can explain European natives’ attitudes towards high- and low-skilled immigrants. It
addresses the limitations of the existing literature by utilizing the rich data of the seventh
round of the European Social Survey (ESS). This survey of 20 European countries allows me
to explicitly differentiate between attitudes towards high- and low-skilled immigrants without
relying on the respondents’ assumptions about the skill level of the immigrants. The labor
market competition channel predicts that natives will oppose immigrants with similar skill
level to their own. My results suggest that the labor market channel does not have a
substantial impact on European natives’ attitudes towards immigrants. The fiscal burden
hypothesis predicts that, under tax-adjustments, high income natives will oppose low-skilled
immigrants and favor high-skilled immigrants. Under transfer-adjustments, low income
natives will oppose low-skilled immigrants and favor high-skilled immigrants. My results fail
to reject this hypothesis.
Degree
Master 2-years
Other description
MSc in Economics
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2018-07-03Author
Tefera, Abel
Series/Report no.
Master Degree Project
2018:102
Language
eng