“…In the early 2000s not only did Germany stand out as much by its large current account surpluses as by its labor market reforms (Rinne and Zimmermann, 2012), but capital out ‡ows and labor market reforms were more generally related across EMU member countries. Figure 1 plots current accounts and the European Commission's Directorate General for Economic and Financial A¤airs and Economic Policy Committee LABREF database of country-speci…c reforms, summarized as in Turrini et al (2015) by the cumulative country-speci…c count of measures deemed to be increasing labor market ‡exibility, net of those deemed to decrease it. 1 These data show that labor market deregulation and current account de…cits were positively and signi…cantly related across countries between 1998 (the …rst year available in the LABREF database and the last before EMU) and 2005, 2006, or 2007 (the choice between these three dates matters little because most of the divergence from zero of the two indicators had occurred by 2005, but a positive time-series association is still visible over the [2005][2006][2007] period in Greece, Spain, 1 The summary indicator includes reforms of "Job Protection (EPL)", "Labour Taxation", "Unemployment bene…ts", "Wage Setting", "Working Time", "Other welfare-related bene…ts".…”