An evaluation of the effect of public support in enhancing occupational incorporation of former Soviet Union immigrants to Israel: A longitudinal study
G. Menahem et M. Lerner, An evaluation of the effect of public support in enhancing occupational incorporation of former Soviet Union immigrants to Israel: A longitudinal study, J SOC POL, 30, 2001, pp. 307-331
Does governmental intervention in the form of occupational training and ret
raining and other forms of assistance improve immigrants' occupational oppo
rtunities both as self-employed and as salaried employers? These have been
longstanding research and government concerns in societies that face large
waves of immigration. This study reports on the research findings of a long
itudinal study which sought to examine the effects of governmental support
mechanisms on the incorporation of a large immigrant inflow from the former
Soviet Union (FSU) high in human capital into the labour market. Three typ
es of public support programmes were investigated: occupational retraining,
subsidised salaries for immigrants and support for immigrants in business
creation. The research population consisted of 910 new immigrants from the
FSU who arrived to Israel in the 1990s; they were interviewed in-depth in 1
992 and again in 1994/5. The findings show that the three support mechanism
s differ in their contribution to the transferability of human capital of i
mmigrants and their earnings from jobs. They also affect men and women immi
grants differently. The question 'what worked?' is discussed from three vie
wpoints: accountability of public programmes, knowledge basis and implement
ation. A training system approach is used to explain differences in the eff
ects of the three policy instruments on the occupational incorporation of t
he immigrants.