Immigration to Switzerland : The Case of the Former Republic of Yugoslavia

From less than 5 percent in 1980, the share of residents from the former Republic of Yugoslavia in the total foreign population in Switzerland rose to almost 25% in 2000, to become one of the largest foreign communities. The largest increase occurs mostly between 1985 and 1998 and represents a unique development in the composition of immigration to Switzerland, as it coincides with a new policy, which from 1995 gives priority to workers from the European Union for new permits and severely restricts work permits for migrants from the rest of the world. The empirical analysis shows that when there is no discriminatory treatment by immigration policy, immigrant workers from the former Yugoslavia respond to financial and cultural incentives in the same way as their unskilled counterparts from Southern European countries. The restriction on permit availability in the mid-1990s appears to have weakened the financial and cultural attractiveness of Switzerland for immigrants from the former Yugoslavia. This may signal a change in the characteristics of migrants from the region toward higher skill levels.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gross, Dominique M.
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2006-04
Subjects:ASYLUM SEEKERS, AVERAGE INCOME, CENSUS DATA, CHARACTERISTICS OF MIGRANTS, CONCENTRATION RATIOS, COUNTRY OF ORIGIN, DAILY LIFE, DEMAND FOR LABOR, DETERMINANTS OF MIGRATION, DETERMINANTS OF MIGRATION FLOWS, DOMESTIC LABOR, DOMESTIC LABOR MARKET, DRIVERS, ECONOMIC IMMIGRANTS, EMIGRATION, EMIGRATION COUNTRIES, EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS, EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES, ESTIMATED PARAMETERS, ETHNIC GROUPS, EUROPEAN MIGRANTS, FAMILY REUNIFICATION, FLOWS OF MIGRANTS, FOREIGN LABOR, FOREIGN POPULATION, FOREIGN WORKERS, FOREIGNERS, ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS, IMMIGRANT STATUS, IMMIGRANTS, IMMIGRATION, IMMIGRATION FLOWS, IMMIGRATION POLICIES, IMMIGRATION POLICY, INFLOW OF WORKERS, INTERNATIONAL MIGRATIONS, LABOR MARKET NEEDS, LABOR MOBILITY, MIGRANT, MIGRANT FLOWS, MIGRANTS, MIGRATIONS, MOBILITY, MOBILITY OF LABOR, OCCUPATION, PERMANENT MIGRANTS, REFUGEES, REGIONAL DISTRIBUTION, REGULAR JOB, SEASONAL WORKERS, SKILL LEVEL, SKILL LEVELS, SKILLED WORKFORCE, SUPPLIERS, UNEMPLOYMENT, UNEMPLOYMENT RATE, UNSKILLED LABOR, UNSKILLED WORKERS, WORK PERMIT, WORK PERMITS, WORKER, WORKER MIGRATION, WORKING EXPERIENCE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/04/6710333/immigration-switzerland-case-former-republic-yugoslavia
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8732
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Summary:From less than 5 percent in 1980, the share of residents from the former Republic of Yugoslavia in the total foreign population in Switzerland rose to almost 25% in 2000, to become one of the largest foreign communities. The largest increase occurs mostly between 1985 and 1998 and represents a unique development in the composition of immigration to Switzerland, as it coincides with a new policy, which from 1995 gives priority to workers from the European Union for new permits and severely restricts work permits for migrants from the rest of the world. The empirical analysis shows that when there is no discriminatory treatment by immigration policy, immigrant workers from the former Yugoslavia respond to financial and cultural incentives in the same way as their unskilled counterparts from Southern European countries. The restriction on permit availability in the mid-1990s appears to have weakened the financial and cultural attractiveness of Switzerland for immigrants from the former Yugoslavia. This may signal a change in the characteristics of migrants from the region toward higher skill levels.