The Abolition of Immigration Restrictions and the Performance of Firms and Workers: Evidence from Switzerland
Author(s) -
Andreas Beerli,
Jan Ruffner,
Michael Siegenthaler,
Giovanni Peri
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
kauffman: conferences and seminars (topic)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w25302
Subject(s) - immigration , demographic economics , illegal immigrants , political science , labour economics , business , economics , law
We study a reform that granted European cross-border workers free access to the Swiss labor market and had a stronger effect on regions close to the border. The greater availability of cross-border workers increased foreign employment substantially. Although many cross-border workers were highly educated, wages of highly educated natives increased. The reason is a simultaneous increase in labor demand: the reform increased the size, productivity, and innovation performance of skill-intensive incumbent firms and attracted new firms, creating opportunities for natives to pursue managerial jobs. These effects are mainly driven by firms that reported skill shortages before the reform.
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