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Employment Growth in Europe:The Roles of Innovation, Local Job Multipliers and Institutions

M. Goos, Jozef Konings and Marieke Vanderweyer

No 15-10, Working Papers from Utrecht School of Economics

Abstract: 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 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.

Date: 2015
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (6)

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https://dspace.library.uu.nl/bitstream/handle/1874/354858/15_10.pdf (application/pdf)

Related works:
Working Paper: Employment growth in Europe: the roles of innovation, local job multipliers and institutions (2015) Downloads
Working Paper: Employment Growth in Europe: The Roles of Innovation, Local Job Multipliers and Institutions (2015) Downloads
Working Paper: Employment Growth in Europe: The Roles of Innovation, Local Job Multipliers and Institutions (2015) Downloads
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