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Fixed-term work contracts and anti-immigration attitudes. A novel test of ethnic competition theory
Author(s) -
Evelyn Ersanilli,
Patrick Präg
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
socio-economic review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1475-147X
pISSN - 1475-1461
DOI - 10.1093/ser/mwab059
Subject(s) - immigration , competition (biology) , economics , german , european social survey , panel data , ethnic group , demographic economics , fixed effects model , test (biology) , affect (linguistics) , labour economics , econometrics , political science , psychology , history , ecology , paleontology , archaeology , communication , politics , law , biology
Whether labor market competition is shaping anti-immigration attitudes is a contentious issue. We conduct a novel test of ethnic competition theory by comparing the attitudes toward immigration of workers with fixed-term contracts to those with permanent jobs in Europe. Fixed-term contract workers are particularly at risk of competition as they have to compete for jobs in the foreseeable future. In the first step of our investigation, we analyze cross-sectional data (European Social Survey, 2002–18) from 18 Western European countries. We find that—contrary to our expectation—fixed-term workers are less anti-immigration. The effect is substantively small. In the second step, we use a fixed-effects design with longitudinal data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP, 1999–2015) to rule out time-constant unobserved heterogeneity. We find that transitioning from a fixed to a permanent contract does not affect anti-immigration attitudes. Our combined results thus add to the growing body of studies that do not find evidence for labor market competition as an explanation of anti-immigrant attitudes.

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