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Product market and labour market reforms
Reforms to product markets in order to increase economic flexibility and improve economic performance are high on the policy agenda across OECD countries. Work in this area funded by the European Commission has examined the impact of product market reforms on macroeconomic performance across countries, measured in terms of employment, productivity growth and R&D spending.

Recently the attention of policy makers and academics has focused on the interactions between product market reforms and regulations in the labour market. Research in this area examines whether the impact of product market reforms on employment rates across OECD countries depends on characteristics of the labour market such as union bargaining coverage and employment protection legislation. An extension to the UK will look across industries at the effects on employment, wages and productivity of product market interventions such as privatisations, Competition Commission investigations and the European Single Market Programme.

Product market interventions such as those listed above affect the likelihood of new entry into an industry. Other work in this area has looked at the relationship between entry and total factor productivity (TFP) growth of incumbent firms. While the research finds a positive relationship, there is substantial variation. For industries near the technological frontier TFP growth increases sharply with the threat of new entry, but for industries behind the frontier it declines.

Further work is looking at empirical measures of the extent of product market competition.

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01 June 2010
Journal Articles
Article
We provide empirical evidence that the reforms carried out under the EU Single Market Programme were associated with increased product market competition.
01 March 2007
Journal Articles
Article
We analyze the impact of product market competition on unemployment and wages, and how this depends on labour market institutions.
01 September 2006
IFS Working Papers
Article
The paper provides empirical evidence that the reforms carried out under the Single Market Programme were associated with increased product market competition.
01 September 2006
External publications
Article
We provide empirical evidence that the reforms carried out under the EU Single Market Programme (SMP) were associated with increased product market competition, as measured by a reduction in average profitability, and with a subsequent increase in innovation intensity and productivity growth for manufacturing sectors.
18 April 2006
IFS Press Releases
Article
Opening product markets up to competition has helped to reduce unemployment in many European countries, according to new research from the IFS.
28 March 2006
IFS Working Papers
Article
We analyze the impact of product market competition on unemployment and wages, and how this depends on labour market institutions.
01 February 2006
External publications
Article
How does firm entry affect innovation incentives and productivity growth in incumbent firms?
29 November 2004
IFS Briefing Notes
Article
In this Briefing Note, we present new evidence on the UK's innovative performance and provide a summary of government business support programmes aimed at fostering innovative activity and technology transfer.
13 October 2004
Journal Articles
Article
How does entry affect productivity growth of incumbents? In this paper we exploit policy reforms in the United Kingdom that changed entry conditions by opening up the U.K. economy during the 1980s and panel data on British establishments to shed light on this question.
01 August 2004
External publications
Article
This study analyses the macro-economic impact of product market reforms undertaken in the European Union over the 1980s and 1990s by examining a large number of regulations and reforms across EU countries.

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