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Date: Tue, 19 Jan 2038 05:13:33 +0200
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<title>As a principle</title>
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<p align="center"><a href="http://immigration-bonds.blogspot.com">
<span style="text-decoration: none"><font size="5" color="#FF00FF">As a
principle, citizens of one member nation of the European Union are allowed to
work in other member nations with little to no restriction on movement. For
non-EU-citizen permanent residents in the EU,</font><font size="5"
color="#000080">
movement between EU-member states is considerably more difficult. After new
waves of accession to the European Union, earlier members have often introduced
measures to restrict participation in "their" labour markets by
citizens of the
new EU-member states</font><font size="5" color="#FF00FF">. </font>
<font size="5" color="#808000">For instance, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France,
Germany, Greece, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal and Spain each
restricted their labour market for up to seven years both in the 2004 and 2007
round of accession.</font></span></a><font size="5" color="#FF00FF"><br>
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