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Eastern European immigrants in the UK

Anna Rosso (Universita degli Studi di Milano, Milano, Italy) (LdA, Milan, Italy) (CEP, London, UK)

International Journal of Manpower

ISSN: 0143-7720

Article publication date: 12 April 2021

Issue publication date: 6 October 2021

413

Abstract

Purpose

The paper aims at examining wage developments among Eastern European immigrants vs UK natives before and after the 2004 enlargement by measuring the extent to which inter-group wage differentials are explainable by these groups' changing attributes or by differences in returns to these characteristics. The enlargement has been a defining moment in British recent history and may have contributed to the unfolding of the events that have culminated in Brexit.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper uses a quantitative analysis of the immigrant–native wage gap across the entire distribution by applying the methodology known as the unconditional quantile regression. The analysis is performed before and after the 2004 European Union enlargement to Eastern countries. The data used is the British Labour Force Survey (UK LFS) from 1998 to 2008.

Findings

At all distribution points, a major role is played by occupational downgrading, which increases over time. The results further suggest that the decreased wage levels at the top of the distribution stem mainly from low transferability of skills acquired in the source country.

Research limitations/implications

The UK LFS does not allow to follow individuals for a long period of time. For this reason, the main limitation of the study is the impossibility to measure for individual-level trajectories in their labour market integration and to account for return migration.

Originality/value

The analysis provides a detailed picture of the wage differences between Eastern European immigrants and natives along the whole wage distribution. The paper also identifies possible causes of the wage gap decrease for EU8 immigrant workers after 2008.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The author gratefully acknowledge the financial support of LLAKES (Centre for Research on Learning and Life Chances). The author would also like to thank Szilvia Altorjai, Christian Dustmann, Simonetta Longhi, Max Nathan, Nicola Pensiero, Ian Preston, Anna Raute and Rebecca Riley for their helpful comments, as well as participants at the LLAKES and ISER seminars and the 2014 Annual Conference of the Royal Economic Society. The UK Labour Force Survey microdata were supplied by the ONS. All conclusions, however, are my own. This work uses research datasets that may not exactly reproduce the National Statistics aggregates.

Citation

Rosso, A. (2021), "Eastern European immigrants in the UK", International Journal of Manpower, Vol. 42 No. 8, pp. 1341-1369. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-10-2019-0479

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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