Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5067136 European Economic Review 2012 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

Based on a modified spatiotemporal autoregressive (STAR) model, we analyze whether borders still constitute significant impediments to labor market integration in the European Union, despite the formal law of free movement of labor. Using regional data from the EU-15 countries over 21 years, we find that this is the case. We further investigate whether the abolishment of border checks through the Schengen agreement or the introduction of the Euro improved our measure of labor market integration across borders, and do not find evidence in favor. Last, we investigate the role of languages, and potentially cultures, as obstacles to labor market integration. We find that indeed language borders play a larger role than country borders in explaining the lack of labor market integration across borders.

► Country borders still constitute significant hurdles to labor market integration in the EU. ► Schengen agreement and Euro introduction did not improve cross-border correlation. ► Language borders matter more than country borders in explaining lack of labor market integration.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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