Emigration and Wages: The EU Enlargement Experiment

42 Pages Posted: 28 Nov 2011

See all articles by Benjamin Elsner

Benjamin Elsner

IZA Institute of Labor Economics

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Abstract

The enlargement of the European Union provides a unique opportunity to study the impact of the lifting of migration restrictions on the migrant sending countries. With EU enlargement in 2004, 1.2 million workers from Eastern Europe emigrated to the UK and Ireland. I use this emigration wave to show that emigration significantly changed the wage distribution in the sending country, in particular between young and old workers. Using a novel dataset from Lithuania, the UK and Ireland for the calibration of a structural model of labor demand, I find that over the period of five years emigration increased the wages of young workers by 6%, while it had no effect on the wages of old workers. Contrary to the immigration literature, there is no significant effect of emigration on the wage distribution between high-skilled and low-skilled workers.

Keywords: emigration, EU enlargement, European integration, wage distribution

JEL Classification: F22, J31, O15, R23

Suggested Citation

Elsner, Benjamin, Emigration and Wages: The EU Enlargement Experiment. IZA Discussion Paper No. 6111, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1965128 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1965128

Benjamin Elsner (Contact Author)

IZA Institute of Labor Economics ( email )

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