The empirical evidence of digital trends in more disadvantaged European Union regions in terms of income and population density

Author:

Garashchuk Anna1ORCID,Isla‐Castillo Fernando2ORCID,Podadera‐Rivera Pablo34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Economic Structure Department, Jean Monnet Center of Excellence on European and Global Studies and Research Universidad de Málaga Málaga Spain

2. Applied Economics Department (Statistics and Econometrics), Economics and Business Faculty Universidad de Málaga Málaga Spain

3. Applied Economics Department (Economic Policy), Economics and Business Faculty Universidad de Málaga Málaga Spain

4. Applied Economics Department (Economic Policy), Economics and Business Faculty, Universidad de Malaga Jean Monnet Center of Excellence on European and Global Studies and Research Málaga Spain

Abstract

AbstractRemote rural and postindustrial regions are much more vulnerable to population drain in comparison with industrialized centers and capitals, due to obvious reasons such as meager job opportunities, difficulties in accessing public services in education, healthcare and transport, housing, entertainment, lack of integration with other territories and, finally, less advanced levels of digitalization. This represents an open challenge for the European Union within the framework of its Cohesion Policy. This paper analyzes the impact of digital trends, represented by the percentage of the population with access to internet and broadband and the percentage of individuals who buy goods and internet services (percentages provided by Eurostat) in less populated EU NUTS2 regions with lower income, on the crude population growth rate composed of natural changes in population and migratory flows and on the unemployment rate by applying panel data analysis. It has been possible to confirm that digitalization has a positive impact on natural changes in population in EU regions with lower economic development. On the contrary, the unemployment rate does not affect natural changes in population, but it does have a negative impact on migratory flows. The findings show that digitalization may contribute to reversing negative demographic trends in more disadvantaged EU regions in terms of income and population density.

Publisher

Wiley

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