ABSTRACT
There is ample research evidence about the economic hardship that immigrants and their families face (see e.g. Kogan 2006; OECD 2007, 2008). The most predominant reasons for such hardship include the low starting position of unskilled and low-skilled migrants and, especially for more highly educated migrants, a lack of skills transferability upon migration. An evaluation of the second generation’s position in the labour market gives insights into the extent to which labour market disadvantages found in the first generation are reproduced in the subsequent one. The labour market integration of the second generation, along with education, helps to determine the quality of structural integration processes. Our research seems to suggest that disadvantages are still present in the second generation, though this is mostly due to lower levels of human capital and lower-status social origins. Yet, there are also disadvantages unaccounted for by these factors that vary according to their specific context of integration.
