Kahanec, M. a Kureková, L. (2012): European Union Expansion and Migration, forthcoming in Immanuel Ness and Peter Bellwood, (eds.), The Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration, Wiley – Blackwell Publishing (2013)
This paper concisely reviews what we know about the experience of an
enlarging European Union with free movement of workers within its borders. We
focus on the two most recent, Eastern, enlargement waves of 2004 and 2007. We
first assess the actual migration flows following the enlargements against the
pre-enlargement expectations and perceptions. We then review the effects of
these flows on the labor markets of receiving as well as sending countries. We
conclude that the available evidence does not indicate negative effects on the
receiving countries’ labor markets or welfare systems. From the sending
countries’ perspective the risks of out-migration lie in skill shortages in
affected occupations or sectors as well as the potential (in)stability of their
public finances, whereas the potential benefits may materialize through brain
circulation. Overall, free mobility can be described as one of the key
achievements, and success stories, of European integration.
Read the report European Union Expansion
and Migration as IZA Policy Paper 36, 2011
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