Explaining Attitudes Towards Immigration: The Role of Economic Factors
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Cogitatio
Materia
Attitudes towards immigration Economic impacts Immigrants Labour-market
Fecha
2021-10-28Referencia bibliográfica
García-Muñoz, T., & Milgram-Baleix, J. (2021). Explaining Attitudes Towards Immigration: The Role of Economic Factors. Politics and Governance, 9(4), 159-173. doi:[https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.v9i4.4487]
Patrocinador
Spanish Government PGC2018-093506-B-100Resumen
In this article, we investigate the determinants of individuals’ opinions concerning the economic impact of immigrants.
Unlike most previous studies, we use a large sample of 61 countries (Joint WVS/EVS 2017–2020 dataset) that are either
net receivers or net emitters of migrants. Using a multilevel model, we test the effect of individuals’ characteristics and
of several macroeconomic variables on the assessment of immigrants’ impact on development. We highlight that natives’
evaluation of the economic consequences of immigration is more influenced by age, trust, education, and income than
by contextual variables such as growth, inflation, inequalities, income level, or number of immigrants in the country. Our
results match with the hypothesis that immigrants are considered substitutes for low‐ and medium‐skilled workers in
capital‐abundant countries. However, neither labour‐market nor welfare‐state considerations can be considered as the
main drivers of the appraisals made about the economic impact of immigration. Our results tend to confirm the prediction
that greater contact with immigrants reduces anti‐immigrant opinions, in particular for skilled people. In contrast, immigrant
inflows lead low‐ and medium‐skilled people to make worse judgments concerning the economic consequences of
immigration. All in all, our results validate the view that education comprises a major part of the cognitive assessment of
the role played by immigrants in the economy, at least in high‐income countries.