| Author (Corporate) | European Commission: Press and Communication Service |
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| Series Title | Press Release |
| Series Details | IP/06/130 (8.2.06) |
| Publication Date | 08/02/2006 |
| Content Type | News |
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A European Commission report (COM [2006] 48) published on 8 February 2006 shows that workers’ mobility from the EU Member States in Central and Eastern Europe to EU15 has had mostly positive effects and has been in most countries quantitatively less important than foreseen. Workers from the ten new Member States helped to relieve labour market shortages and contributed to better economic performance in Europe. Countries that have not applied restrictions after May 2004 (UK, Ireland and Sweden) have experienced high economic growth, a fall in unemployment and a rise in employment. As to the 12 Member States using transitional arrangements, where workers managed to obtain access legally, this has contributed to a smooth integration into the labour market. However, evidence suggests that some of these countries may also have faced undesirable side-effects, such as higher levels of undeclared work and bogus self-employed work. For the EU as a whole, flows of workers have been rather limited. |
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| Source Link | Link to Main Source http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=IP/06/130&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=en |
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| Subject Categories | Employment and Social Affairs, Internal Markets |
| Countries / Regions | Europe |