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was at the best working age (20 to 64), based on the<br />

population projections made by Eurostat in 2010, this<br />

will decline to 56% by 2030. The impact of population<br />

ageing could partially be compensated by an increase in<br />

the employment rate. In order to achieve this compensation,<br />

the employment rate in the 20- to 64-year age<br />

group would have to increase from the current 70% to<br />

78%, which is comparable to the current employment<br />

rate in Sweden, Iceland and Switzerland. If, for example,<br />

Estonia’s employment rates were to achieve levels<br />

similar to Sweden, by age group, it would be possible to<br />

keep the total number of employed persons at the current<br />

level, (almost 609 thousand employed persons in<br />

2011) for another 25 years, i.e. until 2035. In this case,<br />

the employment rate in the 15- to 74-year age group<br />

Figure 4.3.2<br />

Number of employed persons in Estonia and the development<br />

of the employment rate based on various scenarios<br />

Percentage<br />

Maximum employment rates<br />

2011 employment rates<br />

Working age population (15–74)<br />

Employment in case of maximum employment rates<br />

Employment in case of 2011 employment rates<br />

60<br />

50<br />

40<br />

30<br />

20<br />

10<br />

0<br />

1995<br />

2000<br />

2005<br />

2010<br />

2015<br />

2020<br />

2025<br />

Source: The Eurostat 2010 population projections for Estonia;<br />

Estonia’s 2011 employment rates from the Statistics Estonia<br />

database; Sweden’s 2011 employment rates from the Eurostat<br />

database.<br />

Comment: “Maximum employment rates and employment”<br />

means that, by 2030, Sweden’s 2011employment rates will be<br />

achieved in the gender and age groups where they fell below<br />

the 2011 levels. “2011 employment rates and employment” means<br />

that the employment rates in the gender and age groups will<br />

remain at the 2011 Estonian levels.<br />

2030<br />

2035<br />

2040<br />

2045<br />

2050<br />

1200<br />

1000<br />

800<br />

600<br />

400<br />

200<br />

0<br />

would increase from 59% in 2011 to 66% in 2030; and<br />

from 70% to 80% in the 20- to 64-year age group. If<br />

the employment rates should remain at 2011 levels, the<br />

number of employed persons will decrease by 80,000<br />

people, purely as a result of structural demographic<br />

changes (Figure 4.3.2).<br />

In addition to population ageing, labour potential<br />

is affected by the persons that are working abroad as<br />

well as the permanent emigration from Estonia. Based<br />

on the data from the 2011 census, almost 25,000 permanent<br />

residents of Estonia work abroad. In addition,<br />

the registered data for 2004 to 2011 shows that almost<br />

38,000 people emigrated from Estonia, while almost<br />

23,000 people immigrated. Long-term population projections<br />

(e.g. Eurostat’s EUROPOP2010) assume that<br />

Estonia’s net migration will remain negative until 2030;<br />

and after that it will become positive. According to the<br />

projections, the gap between emigration and immigration<br />

would achieve the maximum level in 2020, being<br />

approximately 1,000 persons annually. However, based<br />

on the experience of recent years, one can say that net<br />

migration has tended to be underestimated in the population<br />

projections – for instance, between 2010 and<br />

2011, the gap was 2,500 persons annually. Therefore,<br />

the assessments of the unavailability of quality labour by<br />

Estonia’s employers is further intensified by migration,<br />

which increases the need to make better use of labour<br />

potential or to increase immigration.<br />

4.3.2<br />

Labour market institutions<br />

Like economic development generally, the labour market<br />

also depends on flexible institutions, i.e. the rules and<br />

standards that regulate the functioning of the labour<br />

market, and which, through the stimuli that are created,<br />

impact the supply and demand of labour. 3<br />

We have used the following indicators to compare<br />

the labour market institutions with those of other states.<br />

• Heritage Foundation (HF) Labour Freedom<br />

sub-index, which measures the strictness of labour<br />

legislation (also see sub-chapter 4.1, for the dynamics<br />

of the HF Index of Economic Freedom and the<br />

Labour Freedom sub-index). The index is comprised<br />

of the following six components based on the state’s<br />

labour market regulations: ratio of minimum wage<br />

to the average value added per worker; hindrance<br />

to hiring additional workers; rigidity of hours; difficulty<br />

of firing redundant employees; legally mandated<br />

notice period; and mandatory severance pay.<br />

The index values vary from 0 to 100, whereas, the<br />

higher the number, the more freedom there is.<br />

3 In the analysis compiled by OECD (2012), data was used about 18 OECD states from 1982 to 2007. The authors concluded, among other things,<br />

that more important than the assessment of the impact of individual institutions was to view the combined effect of the various labour market<br />

institutions in the state. For example, high unemployment benefits/the percentage of workers covered by large collective agreements increase<br />

structural unemployment in OECD states on the average, but not in those states, where effective active labour market policies/coordinated wage<br />

negotiations take place. Therefore, a balance between various institutions is most important, which is also emphasised in the aforementioned<br />

concept of flexicurity. In Estonia, the impact of labour market institutions on the general unemployment rate has not been examined to date.<br />

Detailed surveys of the yardsticks used by the EU Commission to measure labour markets, their computation methods and their suitability<br />

to the Estonian context have been compiled by Krillo and Eamets (2010); Võrk, Nurmela et al. (2010), Krillo, Nurmela et al. (2010), and Võrk,<br />

Kaarna et al (2010).<br />

168<br />

Estonian Human Development Report 2012/2013

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