Why Have Labour Markets Reacted To The Global Crisis In Different Ways?

This paper aims to identify the effects of the global crisis on employment and unemployment in the EU countries and indicate factors which may explain the differentiated response of labour markets to this crisis. Analyses show that the global economic crisis affected the labour markets of EU countri...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Comparative Economic Research. Central and Eastern Europe
Main Author: Kwiatkowski, Eugeniusz
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Uniwersytet Łódzki. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego 2016
Subjects:
eco
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/cer-2016-0027
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/633135.pdf
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/633135
Description
Summary:This paper aims to identify the effects of the global crisis on employment and unemployment in the EU countries and indicate factors which may explain the differentiated response of labour markets to this crisis. Analyses show that the global economic crisis affected the labour markets of EU countries, causing declines in employment and increases in unemployment. The greatest declines in employment were observed in Greece, Estonia, Ireland, Spain, Iceland, and Portugal, and the lowest in Austria, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Poland. The greatest increase in unemployment occurred in the Baltic countries, Greece, Spain, and Portugal. The analyses indicate that the scale of changes in employment and unemployment during the global crisis depends on such factors as: the depth of the demand shock and scale of GDP adjustments; the degree of openness of the economy; the scope of alternative labour market adjustments and some labour market institutions, especially employment protection legislation and the share of fixed-term employment contracts. The analyses indicate that the smallest declines in employment (and correspondingly the smallest increases in unemployment) during the crisis can be expected in countries where the EPL indexes and share of those employed on fixed-term employment contracts in total employment are moderate. Celem artykułu jest identyfikacja skutków globalnego kryzysu dla zatrudnienia i bezrobocia w krajach UE oraz wskazanie czynników, które mogą objaśnić zróżnicowaną reakcje rynków pracy na ten kryzys. Analizy pokazują, że kryzys globalny wpłynął na stan rynków pracy w krajach UE, powodując spadki zatrudnienia i wzrosty bezrobocia. Największe spadki zatrudnienia zaobserwowano w Grecji, Estonii, Irlandii, Hiszpanii, Islandii i Portugalii, zaś najmniejsze w Austrii, Belgii, Holandii i Polsce. Największe przyrosty bezrobocia wystąpiły w krajach nadbałtyckich oraz Grecji, Hiszpanii i Portugalii. Analizy wskazują, że skala zmian zatrudnienia i bezrobocia w okresie globalnego kryzysu zależy od takich ...