Opening up the labour market

Published: 19 November 2008 y., Wednesday

Darbininkai stato namą
When the EU expanded in 2004, some of the 15 existing EU countries were worried they would be flooded by workers from eastern and central Europe.

So they were allowed to temporarily restrict access to their labour markets, making it harder for newcomers to work there. The same restrictions were imposed on Bulgaria and Romania when they joined in 2007.

Now it seems those fears were unfounded. According to a new EU report, many more workers have immigrated from outside the bloc than have moved from eastern to western Europe. What’s more, with the economic downturn reducing demand for labour, such labour flows are expected to decline.

There is little evidence that significant numbers of local workers have lost jobs to newcomers or seen their wages decline. On the contrary, workers from new member EU countries have been a boon to the “old” economies, relieving labour shortages in many areas.

The commission is therefore urging EU countries to lift any remaining restrictions and give new members full access to their labour markets. “The right to work in another country is a fundamental freedom for people in the EU,” said employment commissioner Vladimír Špidla. “I call on member states to consider whether the temporary restrictions of free movement are still needed given the evidence presented in our report today.”

Only Austria, Belgium, Denmark and Germany still impose labour market restrictions on the eight central and eastern European countries that joined the EU in 2004. But many member countries continue to restrict workers from Bulgaria and Romania. Lifting them would help avoid problems stemming from closed labour markets, such as undeclared work and bogus self-employment.

Today, nationals from the new eastern member states make up around 0.9% of the population of the western EU members. In 2003, the figure was 0.4%. By comparison, the percentage of non-EU nationals living in the 15 original EU countries has grown from 3.7% in 2003 to 4.5% today.

Most eastern EU nationals working in the west are from Poland, Lithuania and Slovakia, and their top destinations are Ireland and the UK, two countries that opened their labour markets straight away. Romanians tend to work in Spain and Italy.

 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Dollar Near 2-Week High

Expectation Fed May Raise Rates Faster more »

mBank continues to hold the lead in Internet banking

The number of accounts handled by Internet-based banks in Poland has exceeded one million more »

ZARA chooses a Lithuanian partner to enter the Baltic States

ZARA, the leading world retailer of ready-made clothes, has signed a franchise agreement with the Lithuanian company Apranga more »

The outside limit on domestic Russian sales of natural gas

Gazprom Wants to Edge Natural Gas Prices toward USD 60 per Cubic Meter more »

A development plan

Millennium Bank brandishes blueprint for better business more »

The three-year agreement

TeliaSonera Sweden to build communications platform for Swedish police more »

Swiss look to Finland for economic model

Nokia is Finland's biggest success story more »

Two more foreign banks coming to Lithuania

Austrian bank Raiffeisen Zentralbank Oesterreich Aktiengesellschaft and HSBC Bank from the United Kingdom plan to start their activities in Lithuania more »

Poland grants E2bn to coal industry

The Polish government has announced plans to grant its coal industry 9.5 billion zlotys (two billion euros) worth of aid between 2004 and 2010 more »

On the Introduction of the Euro

Lithuanian Prime Minister Algirdas Brazauskas said that Lithuania should not hurry to replace its national currency, the litas, with the euro more »