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Description

Hosts:
Gabriele Spilker – Professor of International Politics and Global Inequality and Co-Speaker of the Cluster of Excellence “The Politics of Inequality” at the University of Konstanz.

Marius R. Busemeyer – Professor of Comparative Political Economy and Speaker of the Cluster of Excellence “The Politics of Inequality” at the University of Konstanz.

Guest:
Helmut Rainer – Professor of Economics at LMU Munich and Director at the ifo Institute. His research covers labour, family and demographic economics, with a focus on gender, citizenship and ethnic inequality.

Episode Overview

How do early childcare and citizenship shape the opportunities of second-generation immigrants in Germany? In this conversation, our Hosts speak with Helmut Rainer about two major reforms from the late 1990s and early 2000s that expanded childcare access and introduced birthright citizenship. Both policies generated “natural experiments” that help identify their long-term effects on education, employment and integration.

Rainer shows how additional months in early childcare boost language skills and later labour-market outcomes, especially for children from non-German-speaking households. Birthright citizenship similarly raises educational attainment and reduces welfare dependence—at comparatively low fiscal cost. The episode also discusses cultural conflicts within immigrant families, gender-specific effects, and why some reforms trigger both empowerment and short-term psychological strain.

Episode Highlights

Links & Resources

Contact: cluster.inequality@uni-konstanz.de
 

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