Abstract: The recent economic crisis has had an adverse effect on the
labour markets of European economies and certain population groups
have been disproportionally affected by it. Increased migration flows
may very well have created further pressures on the labour markets of
host countries. The focus of the analysis here is on differences in
transitions from unemployment to employment and vice versa
between native and immigrant populations in European economies
during the 1998-2015 period. The analysis reveals different
outcomes to transitions from unemployment to employment, where in
certain countries and years, the unemployed natives find
proportionally more jobs, while in other countries and years, it is the
immigrants. In most of the countries, however, employed immigrants
are more likely to lose a job than natives. In addition to identifying
the immigrant-native gap, the characteristics of individuals as
potential contributing factors to the gap have also been assessed. The
results of this analysis show that similar individual characteristics
exert a different influence on the immigrant-native gap in labour
market outcomes in different countries. Thus, similar individual
characteristics are rewarded differently in different countries, i.e.,
their labour markets
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