The European Union and Immigration from New Member Countries
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Case Details: |
Price: |
Case Code |
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ECON017 |
For delivery
in electronic format: Rs. 400;
For delivery through courier (within India): Rs. 400 + Shipping & Handling Charges extra
Themes- |
Case Length |
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20 Pages |
Period |
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1945-2005 |
Pub Date |
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2006 |
Teaching Note |
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Not Available |
Organization |
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Industry |
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Countries
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EU countries |
Abstract:
The case focuses on the issue of immigration from the new member states who
joined the EU in 2004 into the older member states of the European Union. It
traces the process of European integration from the period after the Second
World War, and the formation of the European Union and its subsequent
expansions.
The case further discusses the different approaches adopted by the
older member states of the EU to deal with the expected flood of job seekers
from the newly independent states from Central and Eastern Europe, which joined
the EU after the disintegration of the Soviet Union.
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While Ireland, the United Kingdom and Sweden
were fairly open to immigrants from these countries, the other
EU members imposed many restrictions on the movement of workers
from the new member states. The case then compares the impact of
immigration on the three EU member states that chose to allow
immigrants in, with the countries which followed a more
restrictive approach. It ends by examining the issue of the
expected eventual decrease in the EU's population in the coming
years/decades and the need for these countries to supplement
their indigenous labor markets with immigrants.
Issues:
» Understand why people migrate from one place to another
» Gain insights into the origin, growth and development of the European
integration process
» Understand the economic and cultural imperatives that encouraged people from
the new member states of the EU to emigrate
» Understand the reasons whey some of the older EU countries were reluctant to
allow in migrants, while a few others were more welcoming
» Understand the impact of factors like high unemployment, welfare benefits,
high wage rates and other national, ethnic and cultural factors on the free
movement of labor in the European Union
» Recognize the interplay between an ageing workforce and population, declining
fertility rates, unfilled gaps in the EU's labor market, economic stagnation as
well as the role of domestic electoral politics in the development of attitudes
and policies towards immigration
Contents:
Keywords:
Immigration within EU, EU enlargement, EU labor markets,
Movement of labor, European community, Copenhagen criteria, Immigration curbs in
EU
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