Still Attached? Are Social Safety Nets Working? Labor Force Participation in European Regions [electronic resource] / Benjamin Hilgenstock.

By: Hilgenstock, BenjaminMaterial type: TextTextSeries: IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; No. 18/165Publication details: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 2018Description: 1 online resource (26 p.)ISBN: 1484367634 :Subject(s): Employment Determination | Globalization: Labor | Labor Force And Employment, Size, And Structure | Size And Spatial Distributions Of Regional Economic Activity | Trade And Labor Market InteractionAdditional physical formats: Print Version:: Still Attached? Are Social Safety Nets Working? Labor Force Participation in European RegionsOnline resources: IMF e-Library | IMF Book Store Abstract: The paper examines the evolution and drivers of labor force participation in European regions, focusing on the effects of trade and technology. As in the United States, rural regions within European countries saw more pronounced declines (or smaller increases) in participation than urban regions. Unlike in the United States, however, trade and technology, captured here using novel measures of initial exposures to routinization and offshoring, did not result in detachment from the workforce in European regions. Instead, regions with high initial exposures to routinization and offshoring experienced so-far larger increases in participation, likely driven by an added second worker effect.
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The paper examines the evolution and drivers of labor force participation in European regions, focusing on the effects of trade and technology. As in the United States, rural regions within European countries saw more pronounced declines (or smaller increases) in participation than urban regions. Unlike in the United States, however, trade and technology, captured here using novel measures of initial exposures to routinization and offshoring, did not result in detachment from the workforce in European regions. Instead, regions with high initial exposures to routinization and offshoring experienced so-far larger increases in participation, likely driven by an added second worker effect.

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