This chapter is an attempt to seize in economic terms the deepest reasons of the recourse to immigration: which players, both inside and outside of the receiving countries, benefit from it? Which are the effects of mass immigration on the economy? It shows that the importation of workforce immigration was primarily a temporary immigration concentrated on the industry (up to the seventies), and became later a settlement immigration focusing on the services (from the eighties on).
Immigration - Workforce - France - Germany - Economics - Labor
Michel GRIGNON is an economist, a director of studies at the Research Center on the Economy of Health, Paris, France.
Author Name (Year), “Title”, in: The International Scope Review, Volume Number, Issue Number, TSCF Editions, Brussels.
This book is the outcome of a collective reflection on immigration and interethnic relationships by a multidisciplinary academic team.
Translation in English by Patrick HUNOUT and Ellen MOORE-BOOHAR.
A part of this book has been realized thanks to the financial support of the Robert Bosch Foundation and the French-German Youth Office.
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