The determinants of economic integration among Ukrainian forced and economic migrants in Poland Cover Image

The determinants of economic integration among Ukrainian forced and economic migrants in Poland
The determinants of economic integration among Ukrainian forced and economic migrants in Poland

Author(s): Jan Brzozowski, Konrad Pędziwiatr, Marcin Stonawski, Michał Wanke, Svitlana Luchik-Musiyezdova
Subject(s): Migration Studies, Asylum, Refugees, Migration as Policy-fields
Published by: Uniwersytet Ekonomiczny w Krakowie
Keywords: immigrants; refugees; forced migrants; Poland; Ukrainians; economic integration;

Summary/Abstract: Objective: The article aims to analyse the key determinants of multiple dimensions of economic integration among Ukrainians in Poland, including employment status, job quality, skill matching, job satisfaction, and perceived financial situation, with a comparison between forced and economic migrants. Research Design & Methods: The study draws on a large cross-sectional CAWI survey of Ukrainians living in Poland (1 082 observations), conducted between March and April 2025. We designed the survey to enable comparisons of the economic performance of individuals across economic/forced migration status and urban/central/rural/remote areas. We constructed post-stratification weights to enhance representativeness and reliability of the study results according to voivodship, sex, and age based on the Polish PESEL register. The econometric analysis employed logit models. Findings: In line with the expectations, the study demonstrates that the Ukrainian forced migrants exhibit lower levels of integration than economic migrants. Employment is particularly constrained for women with young children, despite overall high participation rates. Social networks exert positive effects: Polish contacts enhance employment prospects and job-skill matching. Implications & Recommendations: The evidence underscores that women with young children face particular barriers to entering the labour market. Therefore, expanding access to preschools and maintaining child benefits are essential policy measures for fostering economic mobility and supporting refugee employment. Contribution & Value Added: This study provides new insights into the economic integration of Ukrainians in Poland, an increasingly important destination country within the EU. It contributes to the literature by comparing economic migrants and forced migrants from the same ethnic group within a single national context, while explicitly incorporating the urban-rural settlement dimension.

  • Issue Year: 14/2026
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 195-210
  • Page Count: 16
  • Language: English
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