Scandinavian Working Papers in Economics

Discussion Papers,
Statistics Norway, Research Department

No 730: Immigrant skills and employment. Cross-country evidence from the Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey

Bernt Bratsberg (), Torbjørn Hægeland and Oddbjørn Raaum
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Oddbjørn Raaum: Statistics Norway

Abstract: This paper studies the distributions of literacy skills, education, and employment of immigrants and natives in three host countries: Canada, the United States, and Norway. For natives, we uncover remarkably stable relations between literacy skills, schooling, and employment across countries. For immigrants, the relations differ strongly: whereas literacy skills form only a weak determinant of immigrant employment in the North American labor markets, in Norway literacy is much more important for immigrant than native employment. We investigate various sources of this discrepancy and fail to uncover evidence that the finding reflects differential immigrant sorting across host countries. Instead, results show that literacy skills are particularly important for groups characterized by low employment in the Norwegian labor market, consistent with the hypothesis that a compressed wage structure, employment protection, and social insurance with high replacement ratios create adverse employment effects for immigrants.

Keywords: Immigrants; literacy skills; employment

JEL-codes: J15; J24; J61 January 2013

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