The European Labour Market: Regional Dimensions
In: AIEL Series in Labour Economics
9 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: AIEL Series in Labour Economics
In: AIEL Series in Labour Economics
In: Regional studies: official journal of the Regional Studies Association, Band 47, Heft 9, S. 1482-1506
ISSN: 1360-0591
In: IZA journal of European Labor Studies, Band 1, S. 26
ISSN: 2193-9012
In: IZA journal of European Labor Studies, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 7
ISSN: 2193-9012
Labour market policies settled at national level imply a one-size-fits-all labour market strategy. This strategy might not sufficiently take into account region-specific economic structures. In this paper we employ a panel factor-augmented vector autoregression (FAVAR) to evaluate whether active labour market programs (ALMPs) might asymmetrically affect labour markets at regional level. Given the significant difference between Italian regional economies we separately analyse two areas: the Centre-North and the South. Our results suggest that the timing and magnitude of the reaction of employment rate to ALMP shocks in the two areas is substantially different. Moreover, forecast error variance decomposition highlight that different variables seem to drive employment dynamics. In the South employment is mainly driven by its own shocks and by social and economic context variables. By contrast, in the northern regions, the employment dynamics is significantly explained by the dynamics of nominal and policy variables such as remunerations and ALMP.
BASE
This paper provides a critical overview and a detailed research agenda for scholars interested in regional studies with a special focus on old and new European Union member states. The focus is on the microeconomic foundations of structural change and its spatially asymmetric impact on labour markets. Structural change has been long neglected, but the availability of new data and the specific nature of economic transition in new member states has brought again this issue to the fore, suggesting that it might provide an explanation also of several typical features of regional imbalances in old member states. The literature provides theoretical reasoning and empirical evidence to confirm this
BASE
In: Economia del lavoro 8
In: Routledge studies in labour economics 5