The Labor Market Integration of Syrian Refugees in Turkey
Murat Demirci () and
Murat Kırdar
No 1588, Working Papers from Economic Research Forum
Abstract:
Turkey hosts the largest population of refugees globally; however, we know little about their labor market outcomes at the national level. We use the 2018 round of the Turkey Demographic and Health Survey, which includes a representative sample of Syrian refugees in Turkey for the first time, to examine a rich set of labor market outcomes. We find that the native-refugee gap in men’s employment in Turkey (in favor of natives) is much smaller than that reported for most developed countries. Moreover, men’s employment peaks quite early (one year) after arrival and remains there, whereas women’s employment is lower, to begin with, and changes little over time. Once we account for demographic and educational differences, the native-refugee gap in men’s (women’s) paid employment reduces to 4.7 (4.0) percentage points (pp). These small gaps conceal that refugees’ formal employment is much lower. Even after accounting for the differences in covariates, refugee men’s formal employment rate is 58 pp lower. In addition, the native-refugee employment gap is the smallest in manufacturing for men and agriculture for women, and the gap is also much smaller in wage-employment than self-employment and unpaid family work. Finally, accounting for the covariates, the native-refugee employment gap widens for older and for more educated groups, and the gap in men’s employment vanishes for refugees whose mother tongue is Turkish but persists for refugees whose mother tongue is Arabic or Kurdish.
Pages: 53
Date: 2022-09-20, Revised 2022-09-20
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Related works:
Journal Article: The labor market integration of Syrian refugees in Turkey (2023) 
Working Paper: The Labor Market Integration of Syrian Refugees in Turkey (2021) 
Working Paper: The Labor Market Integration of Syrian Refugees in Turkey (2021) 
Working Paper: The Labor Market Integration of Syrian Refugees in Turkey (2021) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:erg:wpaper:1588
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