INTEREST in the position of Mediterraneans on the Dutch labour market is rather recent. After the Second World War the Dutch economy had to be reconstructed and empolyment was low. 1 In the mid fifties a very expansive economic development led to labour shortages in a few specific industries, followed in the sixties by general labour shortages and wage-explosions. The common answer to these problems was the recruitment of Mediterraneans, supported by the Dutch government. The policy makers strongly thought that this immigration was and had to be a temporal phenomenon. The function of the 'guest-workers' was considered to allow a flexible restructuring of some industries and the removal of bottle-necks in the labour market during booms. And indeed, the immigration of 'guest-workers' appeared to be cyclically determined. However, the experience of the seventies contradicted this view. In spite of rising unemployment figures, immigration during the first half of that decade almost equaled the levels of the mid-sixties. Moreover, in the sixties yearly return-migration was about 30% of the number of Mediterraneans residing in the Netherlands, whereas these figures had fallen down to only a few per cent in the seventies. Lastly, family reunion appeared as a mass phenomenon. As a result the total number of Turks and Moroccans in the Netherlands increased from less than 100 in 1960, via ±75,000 in 1972 to almost 250,000 in 1981. All this suggests that their residence is more or less permanent. Thus immigration changed from a business cycle to a more structural phenomenon, and therefore an analysis of their position in the Dutch labour market seems to be valuable. Foreign workers can be found in almost all industries and regions. In this no difference exists with Dutch workers. Such differences do exist, however, with respect to some characteristics of the jobs involved. This is stated in many Dutch studies. 2 Usually immigrants occupy unskilled jobs with low
[1]
Hessel Oosterbeek,et al.
Education, allocation and earnings in the Netherlands: 0verschooling?
,
1988
.
[2]
Dennis Epple,et al.
Hedonic Prices and Implicit Markets: Estimating Demand and Supply Functions for Differentiated Products
,
1987,
Journal of Political Economy.
[3]
T. Bartik.
THE ESTIMATION OF DEMAND PARAMETERS IN HEDONIC MODELS
,
1987
.
[4]
J. Hartog.
Earnings functions: Beyond human capital
,
1986
.
[5]
M. V. Meerhaeghe,et al.
The Theory of Income Distribution
,
1986
.
[6]
R. Datta.
Education and the Distribution of Earnings: The Maintenance of the status Quo
,
1985
.
[7]
J. Hartog.
Earnings functions: Testing for the demand side
,
1985
.
[8]
P. Schmidt,et al.
Limited-Dependent and Qualitative Variables in Econometrics.
,
1984
.
[9]
Michael J. Piore,et al.
Labor Market Segmentation: To What Paradigm Does It Belong?
,
1983
.
[10]
G. Cain.
The Challenge of Segmented Labor Market Theories to Orthodox Theory: A Survey
,
1976
.
[11]
M. Blaug.
The Empirical Status of Human Capital Theory: A Slightly Jaundiced Survey
,
1976
.
[12]
R. Lucas.
Working conditions, wage-rates and human capital: a hedonic study.
,
1973
.
[13]
D. McFadden.
Conditional logit analysis of qualitative choice behavior
,
1972
.