Mateusz Piotr Krząkała : Citation Profile


Instytut Badań Strukturalnych

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Citations

RESEARCH PRODUCTION:

1

Articles

1

Papers

RESEARCH ACTIVITY:

   1 years (2024 - 2025). See details.
   Cites by year: 0
   Journals where Mateusz Piotr Krząkała has often published
   Relations with other researchers
   Recent citing documents: 0.    Total self citations: 0 (0 %)

MORE DETAILS IN:
ABOUT THIS REPORT:

   Permalink: http://citec.repec.org/pkr449
   Updated: 2026-02-21    RAS profile: 2025-12-19    
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Relations with other researchers


Works with:

Palczyńska, Marta (2)

Lewandowski, Piotr (2)

Authors registered in RePEc who have co-authored more than one work in the last five years with Mateusz Piotr Krząkała.

Is cited by:

Cites to:

Ozguzel, Cem (3)

Lewandowski, Piotr (3)

Bahar, Dany (3)

Rapoport, Hillel (3)

Hauptmann, Andreas (3)

Hardy, Wojciech (2)

Marouani, Mohamed (1)

Ruiz, Isabel (1)

Autor, David (1)

Aksoy, Cevat Giray (1)

Dustmann, Christian (1)

Main data


Where Mateusz Piotr Krząkała has published?


Recent works citing Mateusz Piotr Krząkała (2025 and 2024)


YearTitle of citing document

Works by Mateusz Piotr Krząkała:


YearTitleTypeCited
2024Rückkehr oder Integration – welche Perspektiven haben Geflüchtete aus der Ukraine? In: ifo Schnelldienst.
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2025This paper studies how job task routinization shapes return intentions of Ukrainian war refugees in Poland following Russia€™s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Using two waves of nationwide survey data from 2022 and 2023 with worker-level measures of job tasks, we document widespread occupational downgrading accompanied by substantial task routinization, namely an increase in routine task intensity (RTI) as compared to jobs held pre-displacement. Task routinization is substantial among both refugees who transition to lower-skilled occupations and those who nominally retain their pre-war occupational status. Guided by a framework in which task routinization reduces skill utilisation and job satisfaction, we show that refugees experiencing larger RTI increases are significantly more likely to plan a return to Ukraine by 2023, particularly those who initially intended to stay. This relationship persists after controlling for earnings and occupational downgrading and is confirmed using an instrumental-variable strategy. Our findings suggest that job content, beyond employment status and earnings, plays a central role in refugee integration and return decisions. In: IBS Working Papers.
[Full Text][Citation analysis]
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