Employment growth in Europe: the roles of innovation, local job multipliers and institutions
Goos, Maarten ; Konings, Jozef ; Vandeweyer, Marieke
Utrecht School of Economics - Utrecht
2015
38 p.
employment creation ; high technology industry ; highly qualified worker ; innovation ; occupational structure ; regional level ; semiskilled worker
Employment
http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2671765
English
Bibliogr.
"This paper shows that high-tech employment - broadly defined as all workers in high-tech sectors but also workers with STEM degrees in low-tech sectors - has increased in Europe over the past decade. Moreover, we estimate that every high-tech job in a region creates five additional low-tech jobs in that region because of the existence of a local high-tech job multiplier. The paper also shows how the presence of a local high-tech job multiplier results in convergence between Europe's regions. That is, employment in Europe's lagging regions is becoming more similar to Europe's high-tech hubs. However, our estimates suggest that this convergence is happening at a glacial pace, and some suggestive evidence is presented that lifting several institutional barriers to innovation in Europe's lagging regions would speed up convergence leading to faster high-tech as well as overall employment while also addressing Europe's regional inequalities."
Digital
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