Sticky Feet (Directions in Development - Trade)
by Claire H. Hollweg, Daniel Lederman, Diego Rojas, and Elizabeth Ruppert Bulmer
This report quantifies labor mobility costs in developing countries and simulates the implied adjustment paths of employment and wages following a change in trade policy. High mobility costs are shown to reduce the potential gains to trade reform.
The Spatial Impact of Economic Changes in Europe (European Science Foundation)
by Antoine Bailly and William Lever
This volume deals mainly with how changes in the production system are affecting the urban system and the division of labour in Europe. It examines how policies and societal intervention have to take new flexible production systems into account. The first part of the book deals with the theoretical treatment of changes in the production system and the applications of the concepts to Western, Southern and Eastern Europe. The second part examines the processes at a series of different geographical...
The Working Poor (Canadian Institute for Economic Policy)
by Sir David Ross
Who's Qualified? (New Democracy Forum (Prebound))
by Professor of Law Lani Guinier and Professor Susan Sturm
Tarifvertraege Und Tarifpolitik in Deutschland Bis 1914 (Moderne Geschichte Und Politik; Bd. 6)
by Peter Ullmann
The Pesticides Register (The pesticides register)
Labour Migration in Europe Volume I
In this book, Fauri and Tedeschi bring together contributions that outline the movement of job seekers and ethnic minority entrepreneurs in Europe, to analyse the overall impact of different forms of migration on European economies in the last 100 years. Contributions address a broad range of themes, from the motivations of migrants and the process of their integration into their destination country, to their overall social and economic impact onto said country at a structural level. In address...
Research in Labour Economics (Research in Labor Economics, Vol 10)
Retirement Systems for Public Employees (Pension Research Council Publications)
by Thomas P Bleakney
From the Pension Research Council of the Wharton School
The year 2010 marked when the National Bureau of Economic Research declared an end to the Great Recession. The economy had shed over six million jobs in 2008 and 2009, but few had been recalled to work by 2010. Today, government policies have yet to make a significant dent in unemployment. In End Unemployment Now, Ravi Batra explores why this is the case. He explains how joblessness can be completely eliminated--in just two years, and without the help of our painfully incompetent Congress. The P...
The Ohio Jobbank
Toxicology of Substances in Relation to Major Hazards
The Employment Tax Credit and Issues for the Future of In-work Support
The Pesticides Register (The pesticides register)