Authors
Matti Sarvimäki
Publication date
2011/9
Journal
The Scandinavian Journal of Economics
Volume
113
Issue
3
Pages
665-688
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
This paper documents the economic performance of immigrants in a country characterized by an extensive welfare state and a short immigration history. Upon arrival, immigrants to Finland have substantially lower employment rates than comparable natives. While they experience rapid employment growth, only men from OECD countries catch up with natives. Despite the persisting employment and earnings differences between non‐OECD immigrants and natives, the differences in income transfers disappear in roughly 20 years. The immigrant–native employment gaps are larger in Finland than in Australia, Canada, or the US.
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