Economic Impacts of Immigration: The Structure of Immigration and Integration Play a Determining Role

Abstract

The report demonstrates that the economic impacts of immigration are not unequivocally positive or negative, but are decisively influenced by the structure of immigration and the success of integration. Work-based and highly educated immigration clearly yields positive effects for public finances, whereas humanitarian immigration is initially a fiscal burden, although outcomes may improve with effective integration. Those who arrive for protection purposes tend to have lower employment rates and income levels compared to the native population for a prolonged period, even though these differences narrow as their length of stay increases.

In the context of an ageing population, immigration also has growing long-term significance. The shrinking working-age population reduces labour supply, productivity and the sustainability of public finances, and to reverse this trend Finland needs a higher net immigration than at present. Increasing work-based immigration in particular strengthens economic growth and the funding base of the welfare state.

The overall message is that the economic impacts of immigration are determined both by who moves to Finland and by how the country supports their integration. With appropriately targeted policies, immigration can enhance labour supply, increase productivity, and strengthen the sustainability of public finances even in the long term.

Publication info

Results of research
Life course and economic implications of demographic change (LIFECON)
Research groups
Macroeconomy and public finances
Labour market and education
Series
ETLA Raportit - Reports 176
Date
23.03.2026
Keywords
Immigration, Integration, Labour market, Public finances, Economic impacts
ISSN
2323-2447, 2323-2455 (Pdf)
JEL
J61, H53, J15
Pages
22
Language
Finnish