为什么技术移民在劳动力市场上挣扎?6000份简历的实地实验

Philip Oreopoulos
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引用次数: 646

摘要

成千上万的简历被发送到多伦多多个职业的网上招聘广告中,以调查为什么加拿大移民在劳动力市场上挣扎,这些移民是基于技能被允许进入的。简历的结构合理地代表了来自三个最大的原籍国(中国、印度和巴基斯坦)和英国的积分制度下的新移民,以及名字听起来有或没有民族色彩的非移民。除了名字之外,我还随机列出了申请人在哪里获得本科学位,他们的工作经验是在多伦多还是孟买(或另一个外国城市)获得的,他们是否说自己精通多种语言(包括法语)。该研究产生了四个主要发现:1)与具有外国教育和经验的中国、印度或巴基斯坦姓名的申请人相比,具有加拿大教育和经验的英文申请人的面试要求率高出三倍多(5%对16%),但与来自英国的外国申请人相比没有什么不同。2)雇主更看重在加拿大获得的经验,而不是在国外获得的经验。将外国简历改为只包括加拿大的工作经历,将回调率提高到11%。3)在列出4 - 6年加拿大工作经验的简历中,申请人是否在加拿大获得学位,或者申请人是否在加拿大接受过额外的教育,对面试机会没有影响。4)只有名字不同的加拿大申请人的回调率有很大不同:名字听起来像英语的人比名字像中国、印度或巴基斯坦的人多出40%的面试要求(16%对11%)。总的来说,结果表明雇主对有民族名字或有外国公司工作经验的申请人存在相当大的歧视。
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Why Do Skilled Immigrants Struggle in the Labor Market? a Field Experiment with Six Thousand Resumes
Thousands of resumes were sent in response to online job postings across multiple occupations in Toronto to investigate why Canadian immigrants, allowed in based on skill, struggle in the labor market. Resumes were constructed to plausibly represent recent immigrants under the point system from the three largest countries of origin (China, India, and Pakistan) and Britain, as well as non-immigrants with and without ethnic-sounding names. In addition to names, I randomized where applicants received their undergraduate degree, whether their job experience was gained in Toronto or Mumbai (or another foreign city), whether they listed being fluent in multiple languages (including French). The study produced four main findings: 1) Interview request rates for English-named applicants with Canadian education and experience were more than three times higher compared to resumes with Chinese, Indian, or Pakistani names with foreign education and experience (5 percent versus 16 percent), but were no different compared to foreign applicants from Britain. 2) Employers valued experience acquired in Canada much more than if acquired in a foreign country. Changing foreign resumes to include only experience from Canada raised callback rates to 11 percent. 3) Among resumes listing 4 to 6 years of Canadian experience, whether an applicant's degree was from Canada or not, or whether the applicant obtained additional Canadian education or not had no impact on the chances for an interview request. 4) Canadian applicants that differed only by name had substantially different callback rates: Those with English-sounding names received interview requests 40 percent more often than applicants with Chinese, Indian, or Pakistani names (16 percent versus 11 percent). Overall, the results suggest considerable employer discrimination against applicants with ethnic names or with experience from foreign firms.
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