Global Employment Trends 2013 : Recovering from a second jobs dip.
The annual Global Employment Trends (GET) reports provide the latest global and regional estimates of employment and unemployment, employment by sector, vulnerable employment, labour productivity and working poverty, while also analysing country-level issues and trends in the labour market. Global E...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor Corporativo: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Geneva :
International Labour Office,
2013.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Tables; Boxes; Country spotlights; Figures; Acknowledgements; Executive summary; 1. Macroeconomic challenges have worsened; The global economic slowdown intensifies in 2012; Figure 1. Global and regional GDP growth estimates and projections, 2010-14 (annual % change); Figure 2. Global unemployment trends and projections, 2002-17; Box 1. How can uncertainty lead to increased unemployment?; Figure 3. Aggregate demand contributions to real GDP growth; Figure 4. Euro area European Central Bank loans (annualized growth rates).
- Figure 5. Quarterly world merchandise trade by region, year-on-year percentage changeProtectionism and policy incoherence could create further risks for the global economy; Figure 6. Policy incoherence between fiscal and monetary policy; The economic outlook remains cloudy; Appendix 1. The ILO hiring uncertainty index; Appendix 2. Public sector, social security and labour market measures in selected countries; 2. Global labour market trends and prospects; Unemployment is on the rise again, as job creation slows across most regions.
- Figure 7. Annual change in global unemployment and GDP growth, 1999-2017Figure 8. Changes in GDP growth and unemployment rates, 2011-12, selected economies; Box 2. Concerns over growing skills mismatch; Figure 9. Job destruction vs. unemployment duration (2007 vs. 2011); Understanding the scope and nature of the global jobs gap; Figure 10. Employment-to-population ratios by sex, world and regions, 2007 and 2012; Figure 11. Decomposition of changes in the employment-to-population ratio, 2007-12; Trends in employment quality.
- Figure 12. Output per worker growth, world and regions, selected periodsBox 3. New ILO estimates of employment across economic classes in the developing world; Figure 13. Employment by economic class, 1991-2011, developing world; Global outlook for labour markets; Figure 14. Investment is associated with a larger middle-class (2011); Appendix 1. Measuring skills mismatches; Appendix 2. Decomposing changes in employment-to-population ratios; 3. Regional economic and labour market developments; Developed Economies and European Union; Table 1. Labour market situation and outlook.
- Figure 15. Unemployment flows: Developed Economies and European Union countriesFigure 16. The evolution of NEET rates in selected European countries and the Euro area; Figure 17. Labour market participation gap; Country spotlight 1. Growth and job creation in selected EU countries; Box 4. What is measured by the Beveridge curve?; Figure 18. The Beveridge curve in Developed Economies; Figure 19. The Beveridge curve has moved outward in some advanced economies; Figure 20. Occupational shifts; Box 5. Why do some asset price bubbles have worse effects on output and employment than others?