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Mediating
the Transition: Labour Markets in Central and Eastern Europe
A new Report entitled Mediating the Transition:
Labour Markets in Central and Eastern Europe has been published
under the auspices of the Economic Policy Initiative founded by
the Centre for Economic Policy Research and the Institute for EastWest
Studies. The report is written by Tito Boeri, Michael C Burda, and János
Köllö. At a lunchtime
meeting hosted by Zentrum für Europäische Integrationsforschung,
and organized by CEPR, Professor Tito Boeri outlined the main findings
of this Report.
From very high initial conditions, transition
countries in the CEE have experienced an overshooting of the reduction
in employment rates: these rates have declined below levels generally
associated with economies at their level of development. Boeri outlined
a series of policy recommendations, including increased investment in
secondary education – contrary to perceived belief – CEE
countries’ secondary educational record is strikingly inadequate when
compared with OECD countries, and increased investment in transport
infrastructure, in order to increase workers’ mobility.
Key Findings:
- Reductions in labour force participation have occurred at high
costs. The actual retirement age has fallen significantly below the
statutory retirement age, which is itself low by Western standards.
Early retirement provisions, built into the system at the outset have
made it relatively attractive for those with depreciated human capital
stocks to retire, and working pensioners were the first to be
dismissed.
- As a result of the decline in formal employment, the increase in the
number of pensioners and a sizeable informal sector, which erodes away
the contribution base, systemic dependency ratios have increased
sharply, and are currently significantly above those of OECD
countries, in spite of more favourable demographic conditions
prevailing in CEE economies.
- There is a growing consensus on the need to increase retirement ages
in these countries and concrete steps are being taken in this
direction. However, increased participation of older people will
inevitably involve having a rising number of older people in the
unemployment pool who are not on a bridging scheme towards early
retirement. Public employment services will have to learn to deal with
this new clientele – which is still under-represented in the
unemployment pools – e.g., offering support to older people
searching for temporary employment.
- For a given stock of jobs, an increase in the actual retirement age
will make it more difficult for first- time entrants to the labour
market. The most productive use of the time before entering the labour
market is, under current conditions, to extend time spent in school
learning basic new (particularly numeric and foreign language) skills.
Contrary to claims made elsewhere, the human capital stock in CEE
countries, in terms of basic secondary education, is strikingly
inadequate when compared with OECD countries. Evidence from Hungary
and the Czech Republic shows that this adjustment channel is already
being used extensively.
- Marked and persistent regional unemployment differentials point to
significant barriers to mobility, e.g., housing shortages in urban
areas where most vacancies are located and very high commuting costs,
mainly attributable to poor transport infrastructure.
- There is little job creation and job destruction in the CEE
countries in the sense observed in advanced industrial economies. This
is partly because a broad base of small and medium firms do not yet
exist and the dynamics of self-employment, which are significant, are
not measured. Many of the small firms registered in the CEE countries
are ‘one-man-operations’, which could represent a source of
employment growth in the future.
- Wage structures tend to be distorted away from new and smaller firms
for a number of reasons, leading to more unstable labour forces and
less activity in small firms. Large monopolies tend to pay better and
drive up wages in small labour markets. Foreign firms tend to pay
higher wages. State owned enterprises or co-operatives which are not
governed by a hard budget constraint may also pay relatively high
wages, especially to the unskilled workers.
- While TIP (tax-based incomes policies) in many countries have kept
wages down, the associated efficiency costs render it an unattractive
solution. Two possible alternatives are to encourage competition in
product markets as well as enforce income policies via the tripartite
and centralised wage bargaining institutions which have developed in
the transition.
Policy Recommendations:
The Report argues that policy-making has a
potentially constructive role to play in the transition for labour
markets.
- The short duration of unemployment benefit systems in most of the
transitional countries may motivate a quicker exit from
unemployment, but this is conditional on the availability of
vacancies, and probably has in fact accelerated movements out of the
labour force instead.
- At the same time more and more individuals are forced to rely on
social assistance, which is means-tested and generally has a
negative effect on work incentives. The resulting poverty trap may
worsen over time as, so far, high inflation and partial indexation
of benefits have reduced disincentives to work. Unemployment traps
are likely to arise in the case of two-earner families in which both
are unemployed and face very high effective marginal tax rates.
- Active labour market policies could serve as an important flanking
function. These policies could force the unemployed to reveal their
willingness to work and tend to push the inactive into other
categories or to motivate further job-search. The brokerage function
of the Public Employment Services, established in all of these
countries, and proactive staffing policies help monitor workers and
provide an efficient flow of job information to (credit or
otherwise) constrained individuals.
- Fiscal traps are important; the steep drop in employment ratios
has coincided with increases in dependency ratios and tax burdens.
The underground economy can further contribute to this fiscal trap
by draining the state of revenues and thus necessitate further
increases in labour taxes. Saving in social policy spending (e.g.,
associated with the decline in unemployment) should be translated as
much as possible into the reduction of statutory contribution rates
without allowing the extra-budgetary funds to run into surpluses.
- Imposing non-negotiated restrictions on job and labour turnover
via severance benefits would seem inappropriate in the transition,
when a high shadow value is placed on new firm matches which bring
together capital, talent and ideas. Employment security costs have
significant fixed costs. Thus small firms should be exempted from
the application of some of these regulations, e.g., creating
procedural obstacles to layoffs.
- There are distinct rewards but also dangers to EU accession.
Accelerated structural change induced, inter alia, by trade creation
and diversion will lead to more output for many firms and sectors,
but will also hurt others. We present evidence that recent EU
accessions are sometimes associated with a relative increase in
unemployment rates post-accession; the experiences of Denmark,
Greece and especially Spain may be instructive in this regard. The
employment outcomes of accession will very much depend on the
flexibility of product and labour markets.
- Education policy is an excellent example of a public good with
large externalities, as well as an investment with high returns
which are often difficult to finance. Given the relatively poor
secondary educational record of the CEE countries (despite a
widespread view to the contrary) it would seem that increased
spending in this area is appropriate.
- Given the small size of most of these countries, significant
labour mobility in response to regional mis-match in the allocation
of posts and jobseekers can be achieved via commuting without
requiring changes in residence. Investment in infrastructural
projects, improving the transportation network, would significantly
contribute to enhancing regional labour mobility.
Notes for Editors:
We are extremely grateful to Zentrum für Europäische
Integrationsforschung for hosting this lunchtime meeting.
The Centre for Economic Policy Research is a
network of over 400 Research Fellows based throughout Europe, who
collaborate through the Centre in research and its dissemination. CEPR
helps its Research Fellows to develop projects, obtain their funding,
administer them and disseminate their results. The Centre’s research
ranges from open economy macroeconomics to trade policy, from the
economic transformation of Central and Eastern Europe to regionalism in
the world economy. The views expressed in CEPR publications and meetings
are those of the authors and speakers. CEPR takes no responsibility for
these views, and does not take any institutional policy positions.
The role of the Institute for EastWest Studies
has remained constant since its founding in 1981: to help build a
secure, prosperous, democratic, and integrated Europe. It does it as a
transatlantic, multinational public policy network and think tank
working to assist those who make policy in Europe, Russia, the Newly
Independent States, and the United States. It seeks to overcome the
divisive legacies of the twentieth century while creating a new order in
Europe in which governments, the private sector, and non-governmental
organizations work effectively together. It is a non-profit
organization, governed by an international Board of Directors and funded
by foundations, corporations and individuals from North America, Europe
and Japan.
The Economic Policy Initiative (EPI): Strengthening the Public Policy
Process in Central Europe
Launched in 1994 by the Centre for Economic Policy Research and the
Institute for EastWest Studies, the EPI project will strengthen and
‘multilateralize’ the public policy process in the Associated
Countries and will assist in their preparation for accession to the EU.
The Initiative operates in seven EU Associated countries – Bulgaria,
the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, the Slovak Republic and
Slovenia – where local partner institutes coordinate activities within
their own country. In the first phase of the project, participants from
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Russia, and Ukraine are involved as
observers. Funding for the Initiative is provided by the Ford
Foundation, the Pew Charitable Trusts and the EU’s Phare Programme.
Any opinions expressed in the Report are those of the authors and not
those of any of the funders.
Tito Boeri was Senior Economist at the OECD between 1987 and
1996, and from 1990 coordinated their work on human resource policies in
the transition economies. He is currently Professor of Economics at
Bocconi University, Milan, where he teaches a course on the economics of
transition.
Michael C. Burda is Professor of Economics at
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin and holds the chair in macroeconomics
and labour economics there. He is also a Research Fellow in CEPR’s
Human Resources, International Macroeconomics and Transition Economics
research programmes.
János Köllö is Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of
Economics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest. He specialises
in labour economics, labour sociology and more recently, the
transformation of Central and East European labour markets.
Mediating the Transition: Labour Markets in Central
and Eastern Europe
Edited by: Lorand Ambrus-Lakatos and Mark E Schaffer
Forum Report of Economic Policy Initiative No. 4
Contributors: Tito Boeri, Michael C Burda, János Köllö
ISBN 1 898128 32 4 – £10.00/$14.95
Available from: CEPR,
90-98 Goswell Road, London EC1V 7RR
Tel: (+44 20) 7878 2900 Fax: (+44 20) 7878 2999 Email:
orders@cepr.org
And in North America from: Institute for EastWest Studies
700 Broadway, 2nd Floor, NY 10003 New York
Tel: (+1 212) 824 4100 Fax: (+1 212) 824 4149 Email: IEWS@IEWS.ORG
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