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Global Employment Trends 2014 : Risk of a jobless recovery?.

The annual Global Employment Trends reports provide the latest global and regional estimates of employment and unemployment, employment by sector, vulnerable employment, labour productivity and working poverty. They also analyse country-level issues and project trends in the labour market up to 2019...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor Corporativo: International Labour Office
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Geneva : International Labour Office, 2014.
Ã2014
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Copyright page; Contents; Preface; Executive summary; 1. Macroeconomic challenges and global labour market developments; 2. Regional economic and labour market developments; 3. Policies for a stronger labour market and more inclusive growth; References; Annexes; Tables; Table 1. Global, regional and country-specific estimates and projections of the total unemployment rate, 2007-16 (percentage points); Table 2. The global wage employment gap (millions); Table 3. Labour market situation and outlook in Developed Economies and European Union (per cent).
  • Table 4. Labour market situation and outlook in Central and South-Eastern Europe (non-EU) and CIS (per cent)Table 5. Labour market situation and outlook in Latin America and the Caribbean (per cent); Table 6. Labour market situation and outlook in East Asia (per cent); Table 7. Labour market situation and outlook in South-East Asia and the Pacific (per cent); Table 8. Average annual growth rate of labour force, ASEAN Member Countries (per cent); Table 9. Labour market situation and outlook in South Asia (per cent); Table 10. Labour market situation and outlook in MENA countries (per cent).
  • Table 11. Jobs gap and contribution to GDP per capita in MENA countriesTable 12. Labour market situation and outlook in Sub-Saharan Africa (per cent); Boxes; Box 1. What explains differences in unemployment projections?; Box 2. MDG employment indicators; Box 3. Are house price cycles responsible for the slow jobs recovery?; Box 4. Labour flows in Mexico: Formal versus informal flows of workers; Box 5. Education and youth unemployment in Viet Nam; Box 6. Spill-overs from the Arab Spring: The case of Lebanon; Box 7. Fiscal consolidation versus employment-friendly policies
  • Simulation results.
  • Box 8. The potential of active labour market policies to boost growth and employmentFigures; Figure 1. Global and regional GDP growth estimates and projections, 2011-15 (per cent); Figure 2. Evolution of global GDP growth estimates and projections, 2013 and 2014 (per cent); Figure 3. The crisis-related global jobs gap; Figure 4. Global unemployment trends and projections, 2003-18; Figure 5. Annual change in global unemployment and GDP growth,2000-18, baseline and downside scenario; Figure 6. Average annual change in the youth unemployment rate, selected time periods (percentage points).
  • Figure 7. Young people that are neither in employment, nor in education or training (NEET) as the share of the population aged 15-29(2007 and most recent year)Figure 8. Annual output growth per worker, world and regions, selected periods (per cent); Figure 9. Estimated informal employment shares, 2011 (per cent); Figure 10. Average unemployment duration in selected economies (months); Figure 11. Macroeconomic uncertainty in selected economies; Figure 12. Contribution of hiring uncertainty to the increase in the unemployment rate since 2007 in the United States (percentage points).