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Eastward enlargements of the European Union, transitional arrangements and self-employment
[journal article]
Abstract
When the European Union expanded eastward in 2004 and 2007 to accession the so-called EU8 and EU2 countries, respectively, the incumbent member states imposed temporary restrictions on the employment of EU8 and EU2 nationals. Self-employed individuals were exempted from these transitional arrangemen... view more
When the European Union expanded eastward in 2004 and 2007 to accession the so-called EU8 and EU2 countries, respectively, the incumbent member states imposed temporary restrictions on the employment of EU8 and EU2 nationals. Self-employed individuals were exempted from these transitional arrangements, prompting concerns that self-employment could be used as a means to evade the restrictions on labour market access. If the transitional arrangements led to an increase in EU8 and EU2 nationals' self-employment rates, as previous research suggests, then their removal should have led to a corresponding decrease. This article analyses whether the latter has indeed been the case. Using pooled cross section data from the EU Labour Force Survey, over the period 2004-2019, we show that removing the transitional arrangements has had a negative effect on the self-employment rates of EU2 nationals, but seemingly no effect on the self-employment rates of EU8 nationals. Distinguishing between types of capitalist regimes, however, reveals a much more nuanced picture, with significant variation in terms of the magnitude and significance of the effect across groups of countries.... view less
Keywords
EU; EU expansion; eastwards expansion; autonomy; migration; labor market
Classification
European Politics
Labor Market Policy
Free Keywords
transitional arrangements; EU-LFS 2009-2014
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 719-742
Journal
Journal of Population Economics, 36 (2023) 2
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00148-022-00904-2
ISSN
1432-1475
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed