Publication

9 Dec 2016

Given the large numbers of refugees who entered Europe in 2015, this paper looks back at the experiences of five Western European countries – Austria, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden – that integrated Bosnian refugees into their labor markets in the early 1990s. The overall results of the study show that 1) the integration process was a success; 2) under favorable integration policies and labor market conditions, immigrant employment rates reach those of the native population in little more than a decade; 3) granting the right to work quickly upon arrival is important, but failing to do so can still lead to good long-term labor market outcomes; 4) initial unemployment rates in host countries are important, but again, need not inhibit labor market integration in the longer term; and 5) second-generation Bosnians, or those who arrived at a young age, perform roughly on a par with native-born cohorts.

Download English (PDF, 30 pages, 2.05 MB)
Author Mikkel Barslund, Matthias Busse, Karolien Lenaerts, Lars Ludolph, Vilde Renman
Series CEPS Special Reports
Publisher Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS)
Copyright © 2016 Centre for European Policy Studies
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