Something is quietly shifting in the Dutch labor market. Refugees who have just received their residency permits are finding work much faster than they did a decade ago. New figures show a clear upward trend, and a key rule change appears to be driving much of that progress.
1 hour Ago
A Steady Rise in Employment Numbers
Back in 2014, just 1 percent of newly approved refugees had a job within three months of getting their permit. By 2021, that number had climbed to 6 percent. Fast forward to 2024, and one in eight refugees — roughly 12 to 13 percent — was already working within that same three-month window.
That is more than double the 2021 figure, and it tells a story of real, meaningful change.
Most of these early jobs fall in the hospitality and retail sectors. Many refugees take on on-call or agency-based work, which offers flexibility for both the worker and the employer.
It is not always a perfect start, but it is a start — and that matters.
Rule Changes Made a Real Difference
For years, asylum seekers were only allowed to work a maximum of 24 weeks per year while their application was still being processed. In practice, this made things difficult for everyone involved.
Employers were hesitant to invest in someone they could only hire for part of the year, and refugees struggled to gain a foothold in society.
In 2023, the Council of State removed that annual cap. Now, once an asylum seeker has been in the country for six months, they can apply for a work permit without a time restriction hanging over them.
That single change has opened doors that were previously hard to push open.
The longer-term numbers are equally encouraging.
Copyright @ 2024 IBRA Digital