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Labour Market Inequalities Mary Gregory (Pauline Chan Fellow and Tutor in Economics, St Hilda's College, and University (CUF) Lecturer, Pauline Chan Fellow and Tutor in Economics, St Hilda's College, and University (CUF) Lecturer, University of Oxford)

Labour Market Inequalities By Mary Gregory (Pauline Chan Fellow and Tutor in Economics, St Hilda's College, and University (CUF) Lecturer, Pauline Chan Fellow and Tutor in Economics, St Hilda's College, and University (CUF) Lecturer, University of Oxford)

Summary

Low-skilled workers face a future of joblessness or low-wage, insecure employment as technological change and globalization impact on the advanced economies and the European social model is alternately cited as both cause and cure. The contributions to this text review the evidence.

Labour Market Inequalities Summary

Labour Market Inequalities: Problems and Policies of Low-Wage Employment in International Perspective by Mary Gregory (Pauline Chan Fellow and Tutor in Economics, St Hilda's College, and University (CUF) Lecturer, Pauline Chan Fellow and Tutor in Economics, St Hilda's College, and University (CUF) Lecturer, University of Oxford)

Low-skilled workers face a future of joblessness or low-wage, insecure employment as technological change and globalization impact on the advanced economies. 'The European social model' of collective bargaining, minimum wages, employment rights, and social welfare support is alternately cited as both cause and cure. The contributions to this book review the evidence and find that, while the European model cannot remedy adverse global trends affecting low-skilled workers, it does achieve significant success in moderating them. Collective bargaining and wage regulation reduce the incidence of low pay. Minimum wages at prevailing levels provide significant wage protection for more vulnerable workers, without substantial job losses. The significant 'jobs deficit' of Germany relative to the USA in low-wage services is not the outcome of excessively high German wages. Conversely, reliance on wage flexibility to create jobs for the low-skilled does not emerge as economically effective, and can no longer be regarded as the simple panacea.

Table of Contents

Introduction ; 1. Wage inequalities and low pay: the role of labour market institutions ; 2. Employment inequalities ; 3. Low pay - a special affliction of women ; 4. Earnings mobility of the low-paid ; 5. Low pay and household poverty ; 6. Minimum wages and low-wage employment ; 7. The French experience of youth employment programmes and payroll tax exemptions ; 8. Low-wage services: interpreting the US-German difference ; 9. The downside of trade or technological change? Explaining the deteriorating employment and wage position of the low-skilled ; 10. Skills and low pay: upgrading or over-education?

Additional information

NPB9780199241699
9780199241699
0199241694
Labour Market Inequalities: Problems and Policies of Low-Wage Employment in International Perspective by Mary Gregory (Pauline Chan Fellow and Tutor in Economics, St Hilda's College, and University (CUF) Lecturer, Pauline Chan Fellow and Tutor in Economics, St Hilda's College, and University (CUF) Lecturer, University of Oxford)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
2000-10-19
264
N/A
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