Discrimination Against Migrant Job Applicants in Austria: An Experimental Study
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Doris Weichselbaumer
Abstract
This paper presents the results of an experimental study that examined the employment opportunities of Austrians with and without a migration background when applying for job openings. Previous experiments used applicants’ names as indicators for different ethnicities, but this signal may not always be perceived as intended by the experimenters. In this study, a novel approach was applied that signals ethnic background using carefully matched photos as distinct visual cues. While the results document employment discrimination against all groups with a migration background, it is most pronounced for applicants with African heritage. To determine why and when discrimination occurs, an array of firm- and job-specific characteristics were examined. However, they offer little help in explaining the level of employment discrimination in Austria.
© 2019 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
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- The Spending Multiplier in the Medium Run
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- The Residency Discount for Rents in Germany and the Tenancy Law Reform Act 2001: Evidence from Quantile Regressions
- Discrimination Against Migrant Job Applicants in Austria: An Experimental Study
Articles in the same Issue
- Heterogeneous Mortgage Markets: Implications for Business Cycles and Welfare in the EMU
- The Spending Multiplier in the Medium Run
- Population and Economic Growth Under Different Growth Engines
- The Residency Discount for Rents in Germany and the Tenancy Law Reform Act 2001: Evidence from Quantile Regressions
- Discrimination Against Migrant Job Applicants in Austria: An Experimental Study