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001 pwiiw7341
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008 250611t2025 au ||||| |||| 00| ||eng d
040 _cOSt
041 _aeng
084 _aC33
_aF22
_aJ21
_2jelc
100 1 _aThil, Laurène
245 1 0 _aAssessing the interrelationship between atypical work and net migration in the EU: Evidence from 17 Countries (2004–2019)
260 _aWien :
_bWiener Institut für Internationale Wirtschaftsvergleiche (wiiw),
_c2025.
300 _a46 S.,
_b12 Table and 14 Figures,
_c30cm.
490 1 _awiiw Working Papers
_v263
520 _aThis paper studies how atypical work, alongside other labour market conditions, affect intra-EU migration and vice versa in 17 EU countries from 2004 to 2019. Relative increases of part-time and self-employment shares in sending countries increase net migration, whereas relative increases in short fixed-term shares reduce net migration. Net migration shocks persistently reduce part-time share differentials, initially reduce self-employment share differentials and increase short fixed-term share differentials. Atypical work explains about one-fifth of net migration fluctuations five and ten years after a shock. The findings highlight the trade-off between internal (employment flexibility) and external (migration) labour market adjustments.
650 _aatypical employment
650 _aintra-EU mobility
650 _apVAR
650 _alabour market adjustment
651 _aAustria
651 _aBelgium
651 _aCzechia
651 _aDenmark
651 _aEstonia
651 _aFinland
651 _aGermany
651 _aHungary
651 _aItaly
651 _aLithuania
651 _aLuxembourg
651 _aNetherlands
651 _aPoland
651 _aSlovakia
651 _aSlovenia
651 _aSpain
651 _aSweden
690 _aLabour, Migration and Income Distribution
700 1 _aZilian, Stella Sophie
830 0 _v263
_w7703
_twiiw Working Papers
856 4 0 _uhttps://wiiw.ac.at/p-7341.html
942 _cP
999 _c9136
_d9136