Offshoring response to high-skilled immigration: A firm-level analysis
World Bank - Washington, DC
2023
50 p.
outsourcing ; immigration ; skilled worker ; relocation of industry
Policy Research Working Paper
10371
Production management
http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-10371
English
Bibliogr.
"Using a policy change in the Netherlands in 2012 that made it easier and less costly for firms to employ high-skilled short-stay non-European Union workers and a matched employer-employee data, this paper shows that firms in high-skill industries respond by both employing a higher share of non-European Union immigrants and increasing the total amount of offshoring to non-European Union countries. With reduced costs of hiring short-stay non-European Union workers, small firms hire and fire more non-European Union workers in a given year. Many of these workers return to their home countries, establishing direct connections that boost offshoring to firms in the Netherlands. By contrast, large firms absorb some of the workers leaving the small firms. These workers also establish connections between their host and origin countries, boosting offshoring."
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