My aim is to portray current patterns of cross-border labour commuting and its implications through
(1) A longitudinal survey on commuters (N=1.345) and non-commuters (N=1.334) residing in the regions of the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary bordering on Austria,
(2) 20 expert interviews with labour market experts, mayors and business owners in the border regions and
(3) 10 narrative interviews with East-West cross-border commuters.
Mobility of labour is one of the aims of the Centrope strategy 2013+. Yet the actual patterns and implications of mobility in this region have not sufficiently been subject to academic research so far. Literature on the impacts of labour mobility is predominantly focused on economic interests, e.g. labour market outcomes, influence on the wage-setting in the recipient local economy, extent of remittances or recruitment costs for low-skilled temporary workers. In my paper I will extent this perspective by micro level work on this new migration in Europe.