Volume 47 - Article 34 | Pages 1033–1046  

Educational selectivity of native and foreign-born internal migrants in Europe

By Miguel González-Leonardo, Aude Bernard, Joan García Román, Antonio López-Gay

Abstract

Background: It is well-established that internal migration is selective, particularly with respect to age, educational attainment, and nativity status. However, the interplay between education and immigrants’ origin remains largely unknown. Thus, it is unclear how the educational selectivity of internal migration varies by nativity status.

Objective: We establish the educational selectivity of internal migrants in 12 European countries, paying attention to variation between native and foreign-born populations born in and outside the European Union.

Methods: We use microdata from the European Union Labour Force Survey (2015–2019) and run a series of multivariate binomial logistic regressions to estimate the likelihood of changing NUTS-2 region of residence by educational attainment.

Results: Our results confirm a positive association between tertiary education and internal migration, except for in Slovenia, Greece, and the Czech Republic. On average, completing tertiary education increases the likelihood of migrating internally by close to 3 times, compared with less than 1.5 times for secondary education. In half the countries, secondary education displays either a negative or no association with internal migration. We find evidence of a strong positive selectivity of tertiary-educated foreign-born populations, who are on average twice as likely to migrate internally than the native-born with comparable education, except in Hungary, where immigrants are less likely to migrate internally.

Conclusions: By redistributing skills within a country, immigrants are integral to the effective functioning of labour markets.

Contribution: This study provides new evidence on the educational selectivity of internal migration across Europe and shows that the gradient is typically stronger among the foreign-born.

Author's Affiliation

Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research

The pitfalls and benefits of using administrative data for internal migration research: An evaluation of Australia’s Person Level Integrated Data Asset (PLIDA)
Volume 51 - Article 22

The intergenerational transmission of migration capital: The role of family migration history and lived migration experiences
Volume 50 - Article 29

Housework time and task segregation: Revisiting gender inequality among parents in 15 European countries
Volume 50 - Article 19

Internal migration and the de-standardization of the life course: A sequence analysis of reasons for migrating
Volume 46 - Article 12

Demographic change and increasing late singlehood in East Asia, 2010–2050
Volume 43 - Article 46

Distinguishing tempo and ageing effects in migration
Volume 40 - Article 44

Educational selectivity of internal migrants: A global assessment
Volume 39 - Article 29

Smoothing internal migration age profiles for comparative research
Volume 32 - Article 33

Towards a Geography of Unmarried Cohabitation in the Americas
Volume 30 - Article 59

Spatial continuities and discontinuities in two successive demographic transitions: Spain and Belgium, 1880-2010
Volume 28 - Article 4

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research

Is single parenthood increasingly an experience of less-educated mothers? A European comparison over five decades
Volume 51 - Article 34    | Keywords: age, children, cross-national comparison, education, Europe, family life course, inequality, single motherhood

The transition to adulthood in Europe at the intersection of gender and parental socioeconomic status
Volume 51 - Article 23    | Keywords: Europe, Europe, event history, event history, gender, multilevel analysis, parental socio-economic status, stratification, transition to adulthood

The pitfalls and benefits of using administrative data for internal migration research: An evaluation of Australia’s Person Level Integrated Data Asset (PLIDA)
Volume 51 - Article 22    | Keywords: administrative data, Australia, internal migration

The intergenerational transmission of migration capital: The role of family migration history and lived migration experiences
Volume 50 - Article 29    | Keywords: childhood, emigration, Europe, immigration, life course

Measuring the educational gradient of period fertility in 28 European countries: A new approach based on parity-specific fertility estimates
Volume 49 - Article 34    | Keywords: education, Europe, period fertility, quantum, tempo, total fertility rate (TFR)