Recent Labour Market Trends in the Visegrad Group Countries

This study analyses labour market trends that appeared in Poland and other Visegrad Group countries during the global economic crisis, i.e. between 2007 and 2009. Special attention is paid to the changes in employment and unemployment rates that occurred in that period. For the sake of comparison, t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lodz University Press 2011-06-01
Series:Comparative Economic Research
Online Access:https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/CER/article/view/6621
id doaj-ff8d4bea10e3492db0f7d365c65ed753
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ff8d4bea10e3492db0f7d365c65ed7532021-09-02T09:58:27ZengLodz University PressComparative Economic Research1508-20082082-67372011-06-01142254010.2478/v10103-011-0009-z6621Recent Labour Market Trends in the Visegrad Group CountriesEugeniusz Kwiatkowski0University of ŁódźThis study analyses labour market trends that appeared in Poland and other Visegrad Group countries during the global economic crisis, i.e. between 2007 and 2009. Special attention is paid to the changes in employment and unemployment rates that occurred in that period. For the sake of comparison, the labour market indicators are contrasted with average rates for the European Union and the euro area. The presented analysis aims to identify the degree to which unemployment rates and indicators of employment changed in the selected countries in response to the global crisis and to explain why the labour markets in the sample countries reacted differently. It also addresses the changing production volumes and labour market flexibility, particularly towards wages, employment and working time. The above analyses show that the labour markets of the Visegrad Group countries changed significantly during the global economic crisis, i.e. between 2007 and 2009; unemployment rates rose, while volumes and rates of employment decreased. In Poland, the two indicators changed their values relatively insignificantly, but in Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic the changes were quite distinct. In the crisis years, Polish employment fell and unemployment increased to a relatively small degree. Although the main reason for this was the quite favourable growth trend in the Polish GDP, cuts in real wage and working time reductions also played a role. The relatively marked decline in the Hungarian employment is maliny attributed to the strong downward trend in the country’s GDP, but the decline would have probably been much more extensive, if not for the reductions in working time, real wages and labour productivity. The large declines in the Slovak and Czech employment appeared because the countries' GDPs grew smaller while real wages grew bigger. Shorter working hours and limitations on labour productivity that the two countries introduced could not reverse the unfavourable employment trends that occurred during economic downturn.https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/CER/article/view/6621
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski
spellingShingle Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski
Recent Labour Market Trends in the Visegrad Group Countries
Comparative Economic Research
author_facet Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski
author_sort Eugeniusz Kwiatkowski
title Recent Labour Market Trends in the Visegrad Group Countries
title_short Recent Labour Market Trends in the Visegrad Group Countries
title_full Recent Labour Market Trends in the Visegrad Group Countries
title_fullStr Recent Labour Market Trends in the Visegrad Group Countries
title_full_unstemmed Recent Labour Market Trends in the Visegrad Group Countries
title_sort recent labour market trends in the visegrad group countries
publisher Lodz University Press
series Comparative Economic Research
issn 1508-2008
2082-6737
publishDate 2011-06-01
description This study analyses labour market trends that appeared in Poland and other Visegrad Group countries during the global economic crisis, i.e. between 2007 and 2009. Special attention is paid to the changes in employment and unemployment rates that occurred in that period. For the sake of comparison, the labour market indicators are contrasted with average rates for the European Union and the euro area. The presented analysis aims to identify the degree to which unemployment rates and indicators of employment changed in the selected countries in response to the global crisis and to explain why the labour markets in the sample countries reacted differently. It also addresses the changing production volumes and labour market flexibility, particularly towards wages, employment and working time. The above analyses show that the labour markets of the Visegrad Group countries changed significantly during the global economic crisis, i.e. between 2007 and 2009; unemployment rates rose, while volumes and rates of employment decreased. In Poland, the two indicators changed their values relatively insignificantly, but in Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic the changes were quite distinct. In the crisis years, Polish employment fell and unemployment increased to a relatively small degree. Although the main reason for this was the quite favourable growth trend in the Polish GDP, cuts in real wage and working time reductions also played a role. The relatively marked decline in the Hungarian employment is maliny attributed to the strong downward trend in the country’s GDP, but the decline would have probably been much more extensive, if not for the reductions in working time, real wages and labour productivity. The large declines in the Slovak and Czech employment appeared because the countries' GDPs grew smaller while real wages grew bigger. Shorter working hours and limitations on labour productivity that the two countries introduced could not reverse the unfavourable employment trends that occurred during economic downturn.
url https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/CER/article/view/6621
work_keys_str_mv AT eugeniuszkwiatkowski recentlabourmarkettrendsinthevisegradgroupcountries
_version_ 1721176745076326400