This report describes the consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic on the European labour market for three groups in the resident population: natives, EU born, and non-EU born. Combining macroeconomic data on the main labour market indicators - activity rate, employment rate, unemployment rate - with the latest waves of the European Labour Force Survey, the study describes the responses of the European labour markets to the shock and its diverse effects across socio-demographic segments of the population. Focusing on the differential effect, the analysis finds that after a severe contraction for in 2020, especially for non-EU born workers, the macro indicators have returned close to their pre-pandemic trends. However, when considering specific socio-demographic groups in 2020, a sizeable gap becomes evident in the probability of job termination by origin. EU-born and non-EU born workers display probabilities between 25% and 125% higher than natives. Among the already underprivileged group of non-EU born workers, the main losers are the young with a short labour market history in the Union.
MAZZA Jacopo;
SCIPIONI Marco;
TINTORI Guido;
2022-06-17
Publications Office of the European Union
JRC129109
978-92-76-53310-8 (online),
978-92-76-53309-2 (print),
1831-9424 (online),
1018-5593 (print),
EUR 31110 EN,
OP KJ-NA-31110-EN-N (online),
OP KJ-NA-31110-EN-C (print),
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC129109,
10.2760/725468 (online),
10.2760/51541 (print),
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