The unemployment impact of product and labour market regulation: evidence from European countries

"This paper provides robust estimates of the impact of both product and labour market regulations on unemployment using data for 24 European countries over the period 1998-2013. Controlling for country-fixed effects, endogeneity and a large set of covariates, results show that product market de...

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Main Authors: Piton, Céline, Rycx, François
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Bonn 2018
IZA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19301243124911294259-The-unemployment-impact-of-pro.htm
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author Piton, Céline
Rycx, François
author_facet Piton, Céline
Rycx, François
collection Library items
description "This paper provides robust estimates of the impact of both product and labour market regulations on unemployment using data for 24 European countries over the period 1998-2013. Controlling for country-fixed effects, endogeneity and a large set of covariates, results show that product market deregulation overall reduces the unemployment rate. This finding is robust across all specifications and in line with theoretical predictions. However, not all types of reforms have the same effect: deregulation of state controls and in particular involvement in business operations tends to push up the unemployment rate. Labour market deregulation, proxied by the employment protection legislation index, is detrimental to unemployment in the short run while a positive impact (i.e. a reduction of the unemployment rate) occurs only in the long run. Analysis by sub-indicators shows that reducing protection against collective dismissals helps in reducing the unemployment rate. The unemployment rate equation is also estimated for different categories of workers. While men and women are equally affected by product and labour market deregulations, workers distinguished by age and by educational attainment are affected differently. In terms of employment protection, young workers are almost twice as strongly affected as older workers. Regarding product market deregulation, highly-educated individuals are less impacted than low- and middle-educated workers."
format TEXT
geographic EU countries
id 19301243124911294259_e510bb6a0ff341778034da9ce112edce
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19301243124911294259_e510bb6a0ff341778034da9ce112edce
is_hierarchy_title The unemployment impact of product and labour market regulation: evidence from European countries
language English
physical 33 p.
Digital
publishDate 2018
publisher Bonn
IZA
spellingShingle Piton, Céline
Rycx, François
unemployment
labour market policy
regulation
employment security
The unemployment impact of product and labour market regulation: evidence from European countries
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=134659195283
title The unemployment impact of product and labour market regulation: evidence from European countries
topic unemployment
labour market policy
regulation
employment security
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19301243124911294259-The-unemployment-impact-of-pro.htm