During COVID-19 lockdowns it became visible that migrants are often important in sectors that are crucial for the functioning of everyday life. Informed by this experience, this note provides an assessment of the role of foreign-born workers in essential services (referred to as migrant key workers) at regional level for 31 European countries. It examines the share of migrant key workers in regional labour markets, their importance in jobs with different skill requirements, and differences between EU and non-EU migrants. Migrants play a crucial role in health care, where 23% of doctors and 14% of nurses are foreign-born. In cities such as London or Brussels, around half of all doctors and nurses are migrants. Overall, capital regions have the highest share of migrant key workers (20%). Similarly, cities rely more on migrant key workers than other areas, especially in low-skilled occupations where migrants make up 25% of workers.
COVID‑19 and key workers: What role do migrants play in your region?
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
-
28 February 2025154 Pages -
4 November 202437 Pages
-
Working paper4 January 202442 Pages
-
13 December 202357 Pages
-
4 December 202358 Pages
-
18 January 202351 Pages
-
Working paper
In a sample of ten OECD countries
2 February 202294 Pages