This paper summarises the key findings of a recent study on the impact of Eastern Enlargement of the European Union (EU) on labour markets in the current Member States. The study focuses on three main channels along which enlargement may affect labour markets in the EU, namely i) trade, ii) foreign direct investment, and iii) migration. A main conclusion of the study is that trade and capital movements are very unlikely to lead to an equalisation of factor prices. Thus, strong economic incentives to migration are bound to be present. The study indicates that such an influx of migrants will have only a moderate impact on wages and employment even in Austria and Germany. European leaders will soon have to formulate a joint position regarding ...
This study contributes to the literature on destination-country consequences of international migrat...
The research performed within the paper aims to highlight the importance of labour mobility within t...
The enlargement of the EU/EEA area on 1 May 2004 to comprise 28 countries – including eight Central ...
In the EU member states – particularly in Germany and Austria – there are concerns that national lab...
European Union enlargement and the commitment to the free movement of labour within the Union raise...
This paper analyses the impact of the enlargement-related migration on labour markets, welfare syste...
In this paper the relationship between the EU labor markets and Eastern Enlargement is examined. Sev...
In the wake of the EU's Eastern enlargement the high disparity in wages is likely to result in a con...
People migrate across borders for different reasons, economic and as well as others. Independent of ...
The paper examines if the transition period restricting free movement of labour is necessary in the ...
Study for the Department for Education and Employment of the United Kingdom, Bonn 1999 (117 pages).
The present paper studies how European integration might affect the migration of workers in the enla...
This paper shows that the migration-induced re-allocation of labour resources across countries follo...
The free mobility oflabour, being one ofthe fourpillars in the process ofeconomi cal integration, is...
This paper considers the macroeconomic effects of the migration that followed the enlargement of the...
This study contributes to the literature on destination-country consequences of international migrat...
The research performed within the paper aims to highlight the importance of labour mobility within t...
The enlargement of the EU/EEA area on 1 May 2004 to comprise 28 countries – including eight Central ...
In the EU member states – particularly in Germany and Austria – there are concerns that national lab...
European Union enlargement and the commitment to the free movement of labour within the Union raise...
This paper analyses the impact of the enlargement-related migration on labour markets, welfare syste...
In this paper the relationship between the EU labor markets and Eastern Enlargement is examined. Sev...
In the wake of the EU's Eastern enlargement the high disparity in wages is likely to result in a con...
People migrate across borders for different reasons, economic and as well as others. Independent of ...
The paper examines if the transition period restricting free movement of labour is necessary in the ...
Study for the Department for Education and Employment of the United Kingdom, Bonn 1999 (117 pages).
The present paper studies how European integration might affect the migration of workers in the enla...
This paper shows that the migration-induced re-allocation of labour resources across countries follo...
The free mobility oflabour, being one ofthe fourpillars in the process ofeconomi cal integration, is...
This paper considers the macroeconomic effects of the migration that followed the enlargement of the...
This study contributes to the literature on destination-country consequences of international migrat...
The research performed within the paper aims to highlight the importance of labour mobility within t...
The enlargement of the EU/EEA area on 1 May 2004 to comprise 28 countries – including eight Central ...