Latin America's labour market research: a state of the art
In: Labour and society: a quarterly journal of the International Institute for Labour Studies, Band 14, S. 297-332
ISSN: 0378-5408
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In: Labour and society: a quarterly journal of the International Institute for Labour Studies, Band 14, S. 297-332
ISSN: 0378-5408
In: Labour and society: a quarterly journal of the International Institute for Labour Studies, Band 14, Heft 4, S. 297-332
ISSN: 0378-5408
In: Canadian Studies in Population
As rates of population and labour force growth slow in Canada, the country faces important challenges in promoting economic growth and sustaining prosperity. Among the most important public issues are increasing labour force participation rates among groups with low or declining rates of work and reforming education to better prepare graduates for the jobs of the new economy. At the same time, Canada needs to respond to the shifting geography of work. The concentration of employment in a limited number of major urban centres is driving young people to seek work in high-cost cities, while many smaller cities and regions face the prospect of economic and demographic decline.Alors que les taux de population et la croissance de la population active ralentissent au Canada, le pays devra relever d'importants défis pour promouvoir la croissance économique et maintenir la prospérité. Les plus importantes questions d'ordre public porteront, entre autres, sur le taux de participation, au sein de la population active, de groupes présentant des taux d'emploi faibles ou en déclin et la réforme de l'éducation afin de mieux préparer les diplômés aux emplois de la nouvelle économie. Le Canada doit, en même temps, aborder la géographie changeante du travail. La concentration des emplois dans quelques grands centres urbains pousse les jeunes à chercher du travail dans les villes où le coût est élevé, alors que les villes plus petites et les régions sont confrontées au déclin économique et démographique.Mots-clés : population et environnement; climat; utilisation d'énergie; pointe de population
In: History of PIDE series 5
In: International journal of forecasting, Band 13, Heft 2, S. 297-298
ISSN: 0169-2070
In: Socio-economic review, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 239-261
ISSN: 1475-1461
This paper gives an overview of the main areas of labor market research to which the Luxembourg Income Study (LIS) & the Luxembourg Employment Study (LES) projects have contributed & stresses how the characteristics of the two databases have allowed researchers to explore specific topics. Research results on income inequality & working time & on the relationship between low pay & poverty are reported as examples of original contributions made by LIS researchers to the respective fields. Finally, the results of a meta-analysis of journal articles on labor & population economics are used to determine which type of data labor economists use for empirical research & to formulate some suggestions for future developments of the LES database. 3 Tables, 1 Appendix, 57 References. Adapted from the source document.
In: Socio-economic review, Band 2, Heft 2, S. 239-261
ISSN: 1475-147X
In: Australian and New Zealand journal of sociology, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 136-137
ISSN: 1839-2555
In: International journal of population data science: (IJPDS), Band 4, Heft 2
ISSN: 2399-4908
Background and data portfolioSince 2004, the Research Data Centre of the German Federal Employment Agency at the Institute for Employment Research (RDC-IAB) has been offering comprehensive individual data on employees, unemployed persons, job seekers and participants in active labour market policy programmes for scientific labour market research. For this purpose, data from employer notifications and from different administrative processes in the labour market administration are linked. These administrative data are also combined with survey data. In addition, linked employer-employee data allow simultaneous analyses of the supply and demand sides of the labour market.
Data linkageThe data can be linked using unique identifiers, such as social insurance numbers, client numbers from local employment agencies, or establishment numbers. Since the foundation of the German Record Linkage Center (GRLC) in 2011, the RDC-IAB also applies methods for linking with non-unique and error-prone linkage identifiers like names, addresses and birth dates.
Data accessGerman data protection law classifies the data offered by the RDC-IAB as highly sensitive and strictly regulates their use by external researchers. The RDC-IAB has therefore established various data access modes. Although data can be transferred directly to research institutions in anonymised form, this procedure is generally not effective for linked data, as the loss of information due to the necessary anonymisation would be too great. For this reason, the RDC-IAB focuses on the access modes on-site use and remote data execution. In cooperation with other data centres, RDC-IAB has therefore established on-site data access at currently 16 locations worldwide.
In: Equal opportunities international: EOI, Band 27, Heft 2, S. 181-198
ISSN: 1758-7093
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to describe the Gender, Employment and Local Labour Market (GELLM) Programme of Research (2003‐2006), which is delivered through a partnership of academics, policy‐makers, trade unions and practitioners at national and local levels of the UK, directed by Professor Sue Yeandle of Sheffield Hallam University. It discusses the contractual and task‐based relationships, which are set up among the partners and the ways in which the research process is designed and executed collaboratively. The GELLM partnership is maintained without complicated information technology or customised training, relying instead on the commitment of the individuals involved and a very clear and well managed face‐to‐face report‐back structure. The paper concludes by analysing the criteria that made this partnership work successfully and the types of impact it is able to achieve locally and nationally on gender equality policy‐making.Design/methodology/approachThe aims and objectives of the research programme included the production in partnership of gender‐disaggregated "Gender Profiles" of the labour market in 12 local authorities, awareness‐raising about gendered inequality in their local labour markets, and the exploration of specific issues in new, multi‐method local research studies whose focus is agreed with the project partners with a view to "gender mainstreaming" the research findings.FindingsThe GELLM research findings are not discussed as the focus is on the partnership arrangements.Originality/valueCriteria for the successful working of the partnership, and the challenges faced are discussed in the paper.
In: Socio-economic labour market research 10
In: Journal for labour market research, Band 55, S. 1-13
ISSN: 2510-5027, 1867-8343
For most students the aspiration to gain employment in a graduate job is the main motivation for going to university. Whether they fulfil this aspiration depends considerably on national graduate labour markets. We analyse the comparative evolution of these markets across Europe over the decade leading up to 2015, focusing on supply, graduate/high-skilled jobs, underemployment, wages, the graduate wage premium and the penalty for underemployment. The supply of tertiary graduates increased everywhere and converged, and this upward convergence is forecast to persist. In contrast the growth of graduate jobs was slower, not ubiquitous and nonconvergent. Underemployment was spreading, though at a modest rate; this rise was convergent but not ubiquitous. The rise was most substantial in Slovenia, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Poland, Italy and Greece. Graduates' real wages trended predominantly downward, but varied a great deal between countries. The graduate wage premium declined by more than one percentage point in seven countries. Inferences are drawn for the formation of education policy, for the broader discourse on HE, and for research on graduate futures.
In: CESifo working papers 4470
In: Labour markets
This paper contributes to the analysis of central vs. decentral (firm-level) labour market negotiations. We argue that during negotiations on a central scale employers and employees plausibly take output market effects into account, while they behave competitively during firm-level negotiations. Assuming that in both cases the labour market conflict is settled efficiently according to the familiar Nash bargaining solution, we show that central negotiations lead to a lower employment level but to a higher wage rate, when compared with local labour market bargains. While this is an important theoretical result in its own, it has important effects for both empirical labour market research and labour market policies. Also, this result counters the critique that efficient negotiations result in employment levels exceeding the competitive level.