Migration & Information (Europe)

[The Week in Germany, March 28, 1997] EU: LACK OF INFORMATION BIGGEST IMPEDIMENT TO FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT Most citizens of the European Union are aware that they have the right to resettle and work in any of the fifteen EU member states. Too few, a study sponsored by the European Commission contends, understand fully what that means in practice. The commission appointed a working group of experts to examine why more Europeans have not taken advantage of their right to take up residence in other EU nations. In a report issued this month, the working group concludes that the greatest obstacle to freedom of movement is simple ignorance. The EU member states have created the necessary legal framework to allow one another's citizens to exercise their rights of residence and employment, the working group maintains. Many citizens, on the other hand, are uncertain about just how far those rights extend. Confusion is particularly serious, the working group notes, about social welfare guarantees, tax matters and labor law. Bureaucratic complications, it adds, also deter numerous Europeans from relocating within the EU. Germany is now home to approximately 1.8 million citizens of other EU states. The number has been growing by about two percent annually.


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