Both the experience from previous economic crises and first indications on labour market and social outcomes during the current pandemic suggest that the COVID‑19 crisis is likely to have a disproportionate impact on immigrants and their children. This policy brief provides first evidence on how the pandemic has affected immigrants and their children in terms of health, jobs, education, language training and other integration measures, and public opinion, and describes host countries’ policy responses. It complements a previous brief on the impact of the pandemic on migration management.
What is the impact of the COVID‑19 pandemic on immigrants and their children?
Policy paper
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
Policy paper11 October 202241 Pages
-
4 October 202212 Pages
-
Policy paper30 August 202227 Pages
-
21 April 202225 Pages
-
4 April 202224 Pages
-
Policy paper17 March 202257 Pages
-
Policy paper17 March 202216 Pages
Related publications
-
20 April 202613 Pages
-
Policy brief
Healthier lives, stronger societies
15 April 202614 Pages -
Policy brief
Healthier lives, stronger societies
15 April 202613 Pages -
15 April 2026116 Pages -
Working paper
A large‑scale multi‑country stated preference approach
7 April 202675 Pages -
Working paper
A large‑scale multi‑country stated preference approach
7 April 202671 Pages -
Working paper
A large‑scale multi‑country stated preference approach
7 April 202673 Pages