| a) |
the gross domestic product will increase, but this increase will accrue largely to the immigrants in the form of wages; |
| b) |
the overall net gain in income of residents is likely to be small and maybe even negative; |
| c) |
the amount of redistribution between residents is substantial; |
| d) |
the more the skill distribution of immigrants differs from that of residents, the larger the amount of redistribution will be; |
| e) |
residents will skills comparable to those of immigrants will lose; |
| f) |
residents will skills complementary to those of immigrants will win in the long run; |
| g) |
capital owners will win in the short run, but in the long run their gains will disappear; |
| h) |
due to labour market imperfections, part of the income effect for resident workers will be replaced by employment effects (unemployment instead of a wage decrease). |
| a) |
The fiscal impact of an immigrant depends very much on his or her age at entry and social and economic characteristics (labour market performance). The outcomes are most favourable for immigrants who are 25 years of age at entry and perform well on the labour market. |
| b) |
For all entry ages, however, immigrants turn out to be a burden to the public budget if their social and economic characteristics correspond to those of the present average non-Western resident. Accordingly, budget balances are affected negatively. |
| c) |
This average negative contribution of immigrants is not fully the result of a lagging performance. It is partly also the reflection of the generous system of Dutch collective arrangements. |
| d) |
Immigrants who perform better on the labour market than average Dutch residents alleviate public finances over a wide range of entry ages. Accordingly, an inflow of such immigrants would positively affect the budget balance. |
| e) |
The results indicate that immigration cannot offer a major contribution to alleviate public finances and thus become a compensating factor for the rising costs for government due to the ageing of the population. |