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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Studies in structural change and labour market adjustment

Heikensten, Lars January 1984 (has links)
During the seventies growth in the Swedish economy was lower than in the preceding decades. This was particularly true for the manufacturing sector, where the number of employed decreased. At the same time, the public sector expanded, thus avoiding a reduction in the total number of employed. With the help of an ambitious labour market policy aggregate rates of open unemployment were kept at a relatively low level. If the perspective is limited to the labour market this might not seem alarming. However, unpleasant facts are hidden behind the aggregate figures. Some categories of the unemployed such as workers laid off from industry face dark re-employment prospects. The probabilities of re-employment have decreased for youth and older workers in general. The average length of unemployment spells appears to have increased and multiple spells of unemployment are common. This dissertation contain five studies of structural change and labour market adjustment in Sweden. Two of the studies rely on aggregate data. The other three studies are based on individual employment histories, allowing further insights into the labour market behaviour of the unemployed. / Diss. Stockholm : Handelshögsk.
2

Studies in the dynamics of unemployment

Björklund, Anders January 1981 (has links)
From chapter 1: The point of departure for the collection of studies presented in the following is the message delivered by American economists during the beginning of the 70’s that a proper understanding of the unemployment problem requires a dynamic view of the labor market in general and unemployment in particular. The "dynamic view" should emphasize the flows into and out of unemployment. By analyzing these flows a better understanding should be obtained of (i) the causes of unemployment and (ii) the welfare consequences of unemployment. The first study, presented in Chapter 2, aims at giving an empirical picture of "the dynamics of unemployment" in Sweden. Several decompositions of unemployment, which highlight the causes and welfare implications of unemployment, are made. In Chapter 3 one possible explanation to the longer unemployment spells during the seventies is examined, namely the unemployment benefits which were extended in different ways for different groups both in 1968 and in 1974. The analytical approach in the chapter is to analyze the "surviving rates" of the unemployed, i.e. the probability of remaining unemployed from one period (quarter) to the next. In Chapter 4 the same analytical approach is applied to the analysis of the cyclical fluctuations of unemployment spells. The search theoretic literature has suggested two different explanations of these cyclical fluctuations; one has emphasized the importance of inflationary surprises and the other the quantity-rationing constraints facing the unemployed. The empirical importance of these comparative explanations are analyzed using Swedish and U.S. data. A model of the "transition rate" for the unemployed, which captures both mechanisms, is specified. The study in Chapter 5 aims at giving an improved empirical picture of unemployment as a welfare and distributional problem. The first issue analyzed is whether unemployment has deleterious effects on individuals’ subsequent labor market prospects, in particular the subsequent wage level. The second issue analyzed is whether unemployment tends to hit the relatively low-paid in the labor force. The issue whether unemployment duration rather than the stock of unemployed should be the guideline for labor market policy is also discussed in the chapter. In Chapter 6, finally, some important topics for future research in this field are dicussed. / Diss. Stockholm : Handelshögsk.

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