Articles

Migration, Education, and Labor Market Integration: Evidence from a Panel Data Analysis of Institutional Heterogeneity in Europe

Purpose: This study examines the relationship between migration intensity, education-related integration mechanisms, and labor market outcomes of the foreign-born population in selected European countries over the period 2010–2024. It explores how migration flows and migrant education interact within different institutional contexts.

Methodology: The analysis focuses on Germany, France, Italy, Austria, Sweden,  and the United Kingdom and employs panel data techniques using two-way fixed and random effects models. Model selection is guided by the Hausman specification test, which strongly favors the fixed effects estimator, highlighting the role of country-specific institutional heterogeneity.

Findings: The results indicate that migration intensity alone is not significantly associated with improved migrant employment outcomes once unobserved heterogeneity is controlled for. In contrast, migrant tertiary education shows a positive relationship with employment performance. Public education expenditure, measured as a share of GDP, does not exhibit a robust direct effect, suggesting that aggregate spending levels are insufficient to drive integration outcomes.

Originality:  By providing recent longitudinal cross-country evidence, the study contributes to the applied econometrics literature on migration and labor markets. It highlights the importance of institutional context and educational attainment in shaping migrant labor market integration across Europe.

Economic Growth and Government Expenditure in ASEAN Countries: A Threshold Approach

This study examines the effect of government spending on the economic growth of ASEAN countries between 2000 and 2020, using estimates for panel data. The results show that government spending responds positively to the economic growth of ASEAN countries. Intriguingly, this study finds a threshold level for government spending that reduces economic growth if governments let it exceeds 26.82 percent of GDP. Therefore, this study recommends that ASEAN governments need to pursue targeted and rational spending policies.