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Digital
Reforming pensions in Europe: economic fundamentals and political factors
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Year: 2009 Publisher: Munich CESifo

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Digital
The EU budget dispute: a blessing in disguise?
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Year: 2007 Publisher: Munich CESifo

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Digital
Voting in the European Union: Central Europe's lost voice
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Year: 2008 Publisher: Munich CESifo

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Digital
Fiscal policy in new EU member states: go east, prudent man!
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Year: 2005 Publisher: Munich CESifo

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Digital
What are their words worth? Political plans and economic pains of fiscal consolidations in new EU member States
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Year: 2006 Publisher: Munich CESifo

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Labour market institutions and their effect on labour market performance in the new EU member countries
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Year: 2008 Publisher: Munich CESifo

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Book
Labor Institutions and Their Impact on Shadow Economies in Europe
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Year: 2011 Publisher: Washington, D.C., The World Bank,

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This paper analyzes the role of labor market institutions in explaining the development of shadow economies in European countries. The analysis uses several alternative measures of the shadow sector, and examines the effects of labor institutions on the shadow sector in two specific regions: new and old European Union member countries, as their respective shadow sectors exhibited a different development in the past decade. Although the share of the shadow economy in gross domestic product averaged 27.5 percent in the new member countries in 1999-2007, the respective share in the old member states stood at 17.9 percent. The paper estimates the effects of labor market institutions on two sets of shadow economy indicators - shadow production and shadow employment. Comparing alternative measures of the shadow sector allows a more granulated analysis of labor market institution effects. The results indicate that the one institution that unambiguously increases shadow economy production and employment is the strictness of employment protection legislation. Other labor market institutions - active and passive labor market policies, labor taxation, trade union density, and the minimum wage setting - have less straightforward and statistically robust effects and their impacts often diverge in new and old European Union member countries. The differences are not robust enough, however, to allow for rejecting the hypothesis of similar effects of labor market institutions in new and old European Union member states.


Book
Labor Institutions and Their Impact on Shadow Economies in Europe
Authors: ---
Year: 2011 Publisher: Washington, D.C., The World Bank,

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This paper analyzes the role of labor market institutions in explaining the development of shadow economies in European countries. The analysis uses several alternative measures of the shadow sector, and examines the effects of labor institutions on the shadow sector in two specific regions: new and old European Union member countries, as their respective shadow sectors exhibited a different development in the past decade. Although the share of the shadow economy in gross domestic product averaged 27.5 percent in the new member countries in 1999-2007, the respective share in the old member states stood at 17.9 percent. The paper estimates the effects of labor market institutions on two sets of shadow economy indicators - shadow production and shadow employment. Comparing alternative measures of the shadow sector allows a more granulated analysis of labor market institution effects. The results indicate that the one institution that unambiguously increases shadow economy production and employment is the strictness of employment protection legislation. Other labor market institutions - active and passive labor market policies, labor taxation, trade union density, and the minimum wage setting - have less straightforward and statistically robust effects and their impacts often diverge in new and old European Union member countries. The differences are not robust enough, however, to allow for rejecting the hypothesis of similar effects of labor market institutions in new and old European Union member states.


Digital
A fiscal rule that has teeth: a suggestion for a 'fiscal sustainability council' underpinned by the financial markets
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Year: 2005 Publisher: Munich CESifo

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