Job Creation and Local Economic Development
This publication highlights new evidence on policies to support job creation, bringing together the latest research on labour market, entrepreneurship and local economic development policy to help governments support job creation in the recovery. It also includes a set of country pages featuring, among other things, new data on skills supply and demand at the level of smaller OECD regions (TL3).
This publication is the first in a series to take this integrative approach, and it is designed to be user friendly and accessible to all government officials, academics, practitioners and civil society with an interest in local economic development and job creation.
Also available in: French
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Ireland
shows where conditions are ripe for quality job creation due to high skills supply and high skills demand in the 8 sub-regions of Ireland. In 2012, three sub-regions, Dublin, the Mid-East and the South-West, were in a “high skills equilibrium”, where a high supply of skills (percentage of people with post-secondary education) is matched by a high skills demand (percentage of medium and high skills occupations).GVA, income and wages were not available at this geographical level. The Border, Midland and the South-East were in a “low skills equilibrium”, where low skills supply is matched by low skills demand. The Mid-West was in skills deficit while the West showed a skills surplus.
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