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Migration and Irregular Work. Judit Juhász. Panta Rhei Social Research Bt. Budapest Tel./fax: +(36-1) 200-1942 E-mail: juhasz@hungarnet.hu. Debates. E conomic, social and political significance Regulation Possibilities of measurement. Problems of definition, terminology.
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Migration and Irregular Work Judit Juhász Panta Rhei Social Research Bt. Budapest Tel./fax: +(36-1) 200-1942 E-mail: juhasz@hungarnet.hu
Debates • Economic, social and political significance • Regulation • Possibilities of measurement
Problems of definition, terminology Diversity of definitions different estimates Lack of elaborated methodology conceptual uncertainity
Illegal/irregular migrantworker • Legal category • Economic determination • socio-demographicinterpretation Same activity might be qualified/classified differently
informal economy • informal economy - all economic activity which is not officially reported, • registered is neglected when calculating the GDP of the economy. • irregular employment • „black labour” : • Employers fail to register their employees (evading taxes and contributions) • Employees accept the omission of registration, (and fail to pay their taxes and contributions) • the employee does not report that they are not entitled to unemployment benefits (as they are working); • employing foreigners without a permit • “Grey labour” : • registered labour, where the actual employment differs from prescribed conditions. (eg. registering at minimum wage,, but in practice paying more, and the difference is transferred tax-free from pocket to pocket. )
Methodology • In-depth interviews (experts, migrants, employers) • Secondary analysis of existing information (research, literature, statistical data, press) • Empirical research 35 experts: 16 governmental bodies 6 local governments 4 members of parliament 4 trade unions and 3 unions 2 organisations for Hungarians living beyond the borders 42 foreign emloyees 6 Hungarian employers • Expert surveys (Delphi method combined with a standard questionnaire) – 303 respondents Mailed and filled in by the experts themselves
Scale EU: 7-16% of GDP Hungary.: 20-30% of GDP Public opinion: part of everyday norms • Black work: 37% does not strictly condemn • 28% would take part
The proportion of illegal work • in the whole economy: 25-30% ~1,000,000 ps. • Within this 15-20% is from foreigners. (2000: 30%) • The range of the estimates is large: • 30% of experts: less than 20 thousand, • 30% : more than 100 thousand. Average: panel: 115,000 fő entire sample: 80,000 fő
Causes • high level of taxation and labour costs • high social acceptability of irregular work • weak internal mobility • difficulties of getting permits the basic problem relates not to foreigners but to irregular employment in general
Effects Positive • a possibility to fill less attractive and poorly paid jobs. (70%) • With flexibility and low wages contribute to the economic development. (45%) • loss of taxes and revenues • distortion of competition • it affects the social insurance system negatively • conserves poor working conditions Negative
Past trends declining trend of increase
Future trends (expectations) The rate of growth is decreasing on According to the estimations after 5-10 years the growth stops
Composition by citizenship and nationality 90% from the neighbouring countries, 60% Hungarian
Illegal work and qualification Qualification requirement of irregular labour (% of unqualified work)
Sectors • Construction – need for qualified and unqualified workers • Agriculture – seasonal works, multitudinous need for labour force • Catering and entertainment • Trade, vending • Textiles • Households • Highly qualified emloyees
Employment by sectors Source: HCSO, National Employment Office
Foreign or Domestic Irregular Labour? Is there any difference? Advantages of foreign irregular labour (%)
Labour-market competition * 1-Fully disagree, 5-Fully agree
Why? Reasons for the irregular emlpoyment of foreigners in general Munkáltatók Munkavállalók
Why? The main reason for employing foreigners irregularly (panel) Reasons for workers
Why Hungary? • Distance, knowledge of the language, simplicity • Relatives and aquaintances in Hungary • Hungarian nationality, emotional reasons • Almost a mother country (related to other countries) Personal motives • Providing existencial needs • Looking for adventure, getting rid of the ties • Long-run plans, existance, substantiating the career
Conditions • Conditions for work – lack of safety; high intensity of work; working overtime • wages – usually but not always worse than for the Hungarians • Conditions for housing – cheap The employees are losers in this deal
Accommodation of Romanian irregular workers at the edge of Budapest
The accommodation inside „They are rather grateful for it ”
Ways out • reduction of costs and difficulties of legal employment • increase the flexibility of regulation • This includes the adoption of differentiated exceptions aiming at the “whitening” of the informal economy and black labour • decentralizing the decision making mechanism based on the principle of subsidiarity and increasing the capacity and effectiveness of the administration • efficient enforcement of the existing legislation on the basis of clearly stated political aims and commitment, supported by appropriate organisational, human and financial resources • vocational training • well conceptualized, close European cooperation