Search results for "LABOUR"

showing 10 items of 655 documents

The Electoral Effects of Offshoring-Induced Mass-Layoffs: Germany in Comparative Perspective

2012

How does globalization’s impact on the labor market affect political preferences? This study takes up the strategy of a recent contribution (Margalit 2011a) and studies the local electoral effects of regional job losses due to offshoring. By applying the analytical strategy to German national elections in 2005 and 2009, it studies whether and how the finding on U.S. presidential elections travels to other contexts. Theoretically, the contribution adds a perspective suggested by previous research on the individual level political consequences of the globalization-labor market link that addresses the likely social policy preferences of globalization’s losers. Preliminary empirical results ind…

GermanLabour economicsPoliticsGlobalizationPresidential systemOffshoringPolitical sciencePerspective (graphical)languageEconomic systemDifference in differenceslanguage.human_languageSocial policySSRN Electronic Journal
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Literature Review On The German Labor Market

2014

GermanLabour economicslanguageBusinesslanguage.human_languageThe 8th International Scientific Conference "Business and Management 2014"
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Trade Openness and the Skill Premium An Inverted - UU Relation?

2016

Relying on linked employer–employee data from the German manufacturing sector in 1996–2010, I study the relation between the share of exporting establishments and the skill premium within narrowly defined industries. I document that the skill premium tends to be higher in industries with a larger share of exporting establishments. However, once unobserved industry heterogeneity is taken into account, the empirical evidence suggests an inverted-‘U’ relation between the share of exporting establishments and the skill premium.

GermanWage inequalityLabour economicsManufacturing sectorRelation (database)EconomicslanguageOpenness to experienceInverted uEmpirical evidencelanguage.human_languageSSRN Electronic Journal
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Production et destruction de la compétence individuelle : le rôle de l'expérience professionnelle

2007

Cet article présente les résultats d'une recherche de l'impact sur le niveau des compétences individuelles des variables représentant traditionnellement le capital humain. La discussion se centre autour de la façon dont l'éducation et l'expérience professionnelle participent au processus de production de compétences utiles sur le marché du travail ou, au contraire, à leur obsolescence.Les données proviennent d'une enquête au sein de cinq banques au cours de laquelle nous avons demandé aux superviseurs d'évaluer les compétences de 600 employés (de guichet et chargés de clientèle). Il s'agit d'une hétéro-évaluation fondée sur une liste de compétences et de comportements.La thématique centrale…

Gestion des ressources humainesEconomics of educationVocational experienceQualité de l'éducationCompétence individuelle[SHS.EDU] Humanities and Social Sciences/EducationLabour marketApprentissageSkill levelEconomie de l'éducationHuman resource managementEnseignement[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceQuality of educationExpérience professionelleMarché du travail
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The limits of minimum income policies : the oppurtunity to pass the social management of exclusion

1997

A la lumière de l’actuel débat théorique en faveur de l’octroi d’un revenu minimum, nous nous proposons de révéler les apports et les limites de la politique française de lutte contre l’exclusion du Revenu Minimum d’insertion. Après avoir mis en évidence la nécessité de dépassement de l’actuelle pratique d’assistance et montré la nécessité sociétale d’évoluer vers un mode renouvelé de partage du revenu et du travail dans la société, nous montrons que cette « utopie progressiste » bute sur un obstacle économique perceptible dans la carence des possibilités de financement du partage du temps de travail. L’origine de cette carence est à rechercher dans la spoliation d’une partie du revenu glob…

Gestion sociale du chômagePolitique du RMILabour studiesExclusion[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Financesocial servicesSociologyPartage du temps de travailUnemploymentSociologie[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and financesWelfare studiesSocial studies[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceCrise économique
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The Role of Education in Self–Employment Success in Finland

2002

This paper analyzes the effect of self–employed persons’ education on the success of their firms during the economic downturn and upturn of the 1990's. It is found that the business cycle affects the relative closure rates of firms run by self–employed with any level of education. Exit probability is lower for the highly educated during bust, but higher in boom. This is accounted for by two facts. First, running a small firm is argued to be a less attractive choice to wage work, particularly for the highly educated, due to lower earning prospects, less stable stream of earnings, and the cultural tradition of working in large corporations. Second, the highly educated faced a higher outside d…

Global and Planetary ChangeLabour economicsEarningsBustmedia_common.quotation_subjectWageEconomicsBusiness cycleClosure (psychology)BoomRecessionSelf-employmentmedia_commonGrowth and Change
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Geographical Distribution of Unemployment: An Analysis of Provincial Differences in Italy

2007

Unemployment rates appear to vary widely at a subregional (e.g., local or provincial) level. Using spatial econometric models for spatial autocorrelation, this paper focuses attention on the spatial structure of regional unemployment disparities of Italian provinces. On the basis of findings from the economic literature and of the available socio-economic data, various model specifications including different explanatory variables are tested to investigate the geographical distribution of unemployment in the 103 provinces of Italy for the years 1998 and 2003. The results suggest that there is a clear explanation of unemployment differentials in terms of spatial equilibrium and disequilibriu…

Global and Planetary ChangeLabour economicsbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectDisequilibriumDistribution (economics)Spatial equilibriumMunicipal levelEconometric modelUnemploymentmedicineEconomicsDemographic economicsSpatial dependencemedicine.symptombusinessSpatial analysismedia_commonGrowth and Change
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Household Debt and Fiscal Multipliers

2015

We study the size of government spending multipliers in a general equilibrium model with search and matching frictions in which we allow for different levels of household indebtedness. The main results of the paper are: (a) the presence of impatient households and private debt helps generate government spending multipliers greater than 1; (b) as financial conditions worsen and impatient consumers find it more difficult to borrow (i.e. in a credit crunch), the size of the government spending multiplier falls; (c) conversely, employment, vacancies and unemployment multipliers are larger when access to credit becomes more difficult; and (d) the model explains the observed pattern of responses …

Government spendingEconomics and EconometricsLabour economicsGeneral equilibrium theoryDebtmedia_common.quotation_subjectUnemploymentEconomicsCredit crunchMultiplier (economics)Household debtmedia_commonOdds
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Biomarkers and Long-Term Labour Market Outcomes: The Case of Creatine

2014

I evaluate the impact of the UK Working Time Regulations 1998, which introduced mandatory paid holiday entitlement. The regulation gave (nearly) all workers the right to a minimum of 4 weeks of paid holiday per a year. With constant weekly pay this change amounts effectively to an increase in the real hourly wage of about 8.5% for someone going from 0 to 4 weeks paid holiday per year, which should lead to adjustments in employment. For employees I use complementary log-log regression to account for right-censoring of employment spells. I find no increase in the hazard to exit employment within a year after treatment. Adjustments in wages cannot explain this result as they are increasing for…

High energyCreatinine050208 financeEarningsbusiness.industry05 social sciencesAffect (psychology)CreatineUrine CreatinineEducational attainmentchemistry.chemical_compoundjel:J3chemistryBody cellsjel:I198. Economic growth0502 economics and businessBiomarkers; creatine; creatinine; labour market; earnings; employmentMedicineDemographic economics050207 economicsbusinessSSRN Electronic Journal
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Investment and growth in Europe during the Golden Age

2009

During the ‘Golden Age’, the high investment rates reached by the European countries have been considered crucial in explaining growth. The literature about the Golden Age has emphasized supply-side explanations based on structural change, the reconstruction effort and the catch-up hypothesis, but also demand-side explanations focused on the effects of demand stability for promoting high rates of investment. In this article we have focused our attention on the evolution of the user cost of capital for explaining the high rates of investment. Our hypothesis is that the increase in investment rates was propelled by the decline in the user cost of capital, the consequence largely of the drop i…

High rateHistoryLabour economicsCost of capitalReturn on investmentEconomics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)EconomicsTrade barrierInvestment (macroeconomics)Relative priceEuropean Review of Economic History
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