Publication | Open Access
The Employment Effects of Immigration: Evidence from the Mass Arrival of German Expellees in Postwar Germany
86
Citations
28
References
2014
Year
Human MigrationEmigrationEconomic HistoryForced MigrationForced Mass MigrationLabor MigrationWorld War IiPublic HealthMigration PolicyPostwar GermanyWest GermanyEconomicsPopulation MigrationLabor EconomicsInternational Population MovementMass ArrivalSociologyBusinessEmployment EffectsGerman HistoryMigrant WorkerDemographyUnemploymentPopulation MovementImmigration
This article studies the employment effects of one of the largest forced population movements in history, the influx of millions of German expellees to West Germany after World War II. This episode of forced mass migration provides a unique setting to study the causal effects of immigration. Expellees were not selected on the basis of skills or labor market prospects and, as ethnic Germans, were close substitutes to native West Germans. Expellee inflows substantially reduced native employment. The displacement effect was, however, highly nonlinear and limited to labor market segments with very high inflow rates.
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