Combatting Unemployment

Richard Layard author Stephen J Nickell author Klaus F Zimmermann editor Werner Eichhorst editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:26th May '11

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Combatting Unemployment cover

Why is unemployment higher in some countries than others? Why does it fluctuate between decades? Why are some people at greater risk than others? Layard and Nickell have worked on these issues for thirty years. Their famous model, first published in 1986, is now used throughout the world. It asserts that unemployment must be high enough to reduce the real wages for which workers settle to the level justified by productivity. So what affects 'wage push'? The authors showed early on that the key factors affecting 'wage push' are how unemployed workers are treated and how wages are negotiated. If unemployed people get benefits without being required to accept jobs, vacancies go unfilled and mass unemployment results. The solution is welfare-to-work policies like those now introduced in most parts of the world. The authors have proposed these policies for the last twenty-five years in a series of key articles reproduced in this book. Their original analysis explains the subsequent movement of unemployment over the last two decades. They conclude the book with a new chapter on what should be done in the recession: no-one, they say, should be given unemployment benefit beyond a year, after which they should be offered work.

should be on the reading list of all serious students of economics * Arnaud Vaganay, Journal of Social Policy *
A brief review like this cannot do justice to the depth and breadth of the research of Layard and Nickell. Their path-breaking work has motivated numerous related labour studies. ... This book is essential reading for economists, politicians and social scientists. * G.C. Lim, The Economic Record *

ISBN: 9780199609789

Dimensions: 223mm x 152mm x 25mm

Weight: unknown

268 pages