Crisis in Eastern Europe
Recent studies by the World Bank and Allianz show that Eastern
Europe will lose 15% or more of its population by mid-century,
resulting in what could be a grave economic crisis. The
demographic problem of dwindling birth rates is compounded
by low income levels in the region, which threaten the solvency
of the pension and health systems. The CR is already using
about 200,000 legal foreigners to help prop up its labor market
and pension system and, by some estimates, needs twice this
number to fill current job vacancies caused by a boom in
government-subsidized foreign investment. Fast-tracking the
work permits of Ukrainians or Bulgarians will help ease the labor
shortage in the short term, but in the long term these green
cards could in fact aggravate the crisis further east. A regional
solution is urgently needed, unless the fallback plan is to let
millions of Chinese workers into Europe.
[Czech Republic labor unemployment investment incentives]
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