Unemployment persistence in Europe: evidence from the 27 EU countries
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Abstract
This paper investigates unemployment persistence in the 27 EU member states by applying fractional integration
methods to quarterly data (both seasonally adjusted and unadjusted) from 2000q1 to 2020q4. The obtained
evidence points to high levels of persistence in all cases. With seasonally adjusted data, a small degree of mean
reversion is found in the case of Belgium, Luxembourg and Malta, but this evidence disappears under the
assumption of weakly correlated disturbances. More cases of mean reversion are found instead when analysing
the unadjusted series. In particular, countries such as Belgium, France, Croatia, Italy, Luxembourg and Malta
display orders of integration significantly lower than 1. In addition, significant negative time trends are found in
the case of Bulgaria, Croatia, Malta and Romania, and a positive one for Luxembourg. Finally, the Covid-19
pandemic had mixed effects, with (seasonal) persistence increasing in some countries whilst decreasing in
others and not changing in a minority of cases. On the whole, our results support the hysteresis hypothesis for the
European economies.
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Bibliographic citation
Caporale, G. M., Gil-Alana, L. A., & Trejo, P. V. (2022). Unemployment persistence in Europe: evidence from the 27 EU countries. In Heliyon (Vol. 8, Issue 2, p. e08898). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e08898







