| Mark | Date Date | Title Title | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. 14 | 19 Sep 2003 |
National Versus Regional Financing and Management of Unemployment and Related Benefits
Decentralization looms large in any analysis of Canadian economic and social policy. This trend has been especially pronounced in the area of unemployment insurance (UI) and social assistance (SA) programmes. Provinces now manage SA programmes and... |
|||
| No. 29 | 16 Dec 2005 |
Net Social Expenditure, 2005 Edition
This is the 2005 edition of a Net Social Expenditure paper that contains information on net (after tax) public and private social expenditure. These indicators supplement the detailed historical information on gross (before tax) publicly mandated... |
|||
| No. 40 | 04 Dec 2006 |
Neutral or Fair?
1. Economists and policymakers increasingly use the word “actuarial” in the analysis of pension systems and retirement incentives. But the debate is often confused. “Actuarial fairness” and “actuarial neutrality” are promoted loosely as desirable... |
|||
| No. 217 | 04 Sep 2018 |
Organised Decentralisation of Collective Bargaining
This paper investigates different varieties of so called organised decentralisation of collective bargaining in Germany, the Netherlands and Denmark. Organised decentralisation occurs within the framework of sector agreements, which explicitly allow... |
|||
| No. 121 | 01 Sep 2011 |
Over-Qualified or Under-Skilled
Mismatches between workers’ competences and what is required by their job are widespread in OECD countries. Studies that use qualifications as proxies for competences suggest that as many as one in four workers could be over-qualified and as many as... |
|||
| No. 172 | 19 Nov 2015 |
Paid Parental Leave
The United States is at a crossroads in its policies towards the family and gender equality. Currently America provides basic support for children, fathers, and mothers in the form of unpaid parental leave, child-related tax breaks, and limited... |
|||
| No. 86 | 08 Apr 2009 |
Pension Reform in Chile Revisited
The paper describes Chile’s pension reform of 1980, which replaced the existing pay-as-you-go public pension programs by a new funded pension program managed by private companies (the “AFP´s”). It comments on the main results of this reform so far,... |
|||
| No. 53 | 07 Jun 2007 |
Pension Reform in China
China is currently in the process of developing the largest pension system in the world, and it is doing this at a time of unparalleled economic and demographic transition. The central government has followed a step-by-step approach to develop a... |
|||
| No. 84 | 09 Apr 2009 |
Pension Schemes for the Self-Employed in OECD Countries
The self-employed workers make up a small but significant minority of the workforce in many OECD countries. Moreover, transitions into and out of self-employment have become much more common for a larger group of workers. It is therefore of critical... |
|||
| No. 77 | 28 Jan 2009 |
Pensions, Purchasing-Power Risk, Inflation and Indexation
The rapid rise in inflation in 2006-07 has attracted attention – once again – both to how pensions systems should react to changes in prices, and to how they do so in practice. Although inflation is now falling as a result of lower commodity prices... |
|||
| No. 176 | 26 Feb 2016 |
Policies to promote access to good-quality affordable housing in OECD countries
This paper develops OECD information on housing policies and the degree to which OECD countries pursue social policy objectives them. Data collected by the OECD shows that most OECD countries provide considerable support to promote access to... |
|||
| No. 223 | 11 Feb 2019 |
Productivity and wage effects of firm-level collective agreements
How do firm-level collective agreements affect firm performance in a multi-level bargaining system? Using detailed Belgian linked employer-employee panel data, our findings show that firm agreements increase both wage costs and labour productivity... |
|||
| No. 251 | 22 Dec 2020 |
Promoting social mobility in Austria
While income inequality in Austria is relatively low compared to many other OECD countries, social mobility lags behind. Socio-economic outcomes carry over strongly from one generation to the next: more than elsewhere, fathers’ earnings are a strong... |
|||
| No. 45 | 21 Dec 2006 |
Publicly-provided Services and the Distribution of Resources
This report looks at the effects on the distribution of household income of those government-provided services that confer a personal benefit to users. While most of the comparative evidence of the size and evolution of income inequalities in OECD... |
|||
| No. 187 | 10 Jun 2016 |
Raising the mobility of third-country nationals in the EU. Effects from naturalisation and long-term resident status
This paper is part of the joint project between the Directorate General for Migration and Home Affairs of the European Commission and the OECD’s Directorate for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs on “Review of Labour Migration Policy in Europe”.... |
|||
| No. 122 | 04 Oct 2011 |
Redistribution Policy and Inequality Reduction in OECD Countries
We use a range of data sources to assess if, and to what extent, government redistribution policies have slowed or accelerated the trend towards greater income disparities in the past 20-25 years. In most countries, inequality among “non-elderly”... |
|||
| No. 150 | 17 Jun 2013 |
Redistribution Policy in Europe and the United States
Working-age individuals and their families have experienced increases in relative income poverty before the Great Recession (GR), and they have also seen significant income losses since the beginning of the downturn in 2007/8. This paper examines the... |
|||
| No. 257 | 22 Jan 2021 |
Redistribution from a joint income-wealth perspective
Redistributive analyses typically use household income as the main reference variable to rank households and to assess their tax liabilities and benefit entitlements. However, the importance of wealth, and the potential redistributive effects of... |
|||
| No. 103 | 19 Mar 2010 |
Reforming Policies on Foreign Workers in Israel
Since the early 1990s, Israel has enacted a managed migration scheme for low-skilled foreign workers. Originally designed to replace Palestinian cross-border workers from the Occupied Territories in the secondary labour market, in 2007 foreign... |
|||
| No. 66 | 30 Jun 2008 |
Reforming Retirement-Income Systems
1. Reforming pensions looms large over the policy agenda of OECD countries. This is hardly surprising since public spending on pensions accounted on average for 7 per cent of OECD GDP in 2005; and this pension spending effort is set to increase... |
OECD Social, Employment and Migration Working Papers
English, French
- ISSN: 1815199X (online)
- https://doi.org/10.1787/1815199X
141 - 160 of 249 results
National Versus Regional Financing and Management of Unemployment and Related Benefits
David Gray
19 Sep 2003
Decentralization looms large in any analysis of Canadian economic and social policy. This trend has been especially pronounced in the area of unemployment insurance (UI) and social assistance (SA) programmes. Provinces now manage SA programmes and...
Net Social Expenditure, 2005 Edition
Willem Adema and Maxime Ladaique
16 Dec 2005
This is the 2005 edition of a Net Social Expenditure paper that contains information on net (after tax) public and private social expenditure. These indicators supplement the detailed historical information on gross (before tax) publicly mandated...
Neutral or Fair?
Monika Queisser and Edward Whitehouse
04 Dec 2006
1. Economists and policymakers increasingly use the word “actuarial” in the analysis of pension systems and retirement incentives. But the debate is often confused. “Actuarial fairness” and “actuarial neutrality” are promoted loosely as desirable...
Organised Decentralisation of Collective Bargaining
Christian Lyhne Ibsen and Maarten Keune
04 Sep 2018
This paper investigates different varieties of so called organised decentralisation of collective bargaining in Germany, the Netherlands and Denmark. Organised decentralisation occurs within the framework of sector agreements, which explicitly allow...
Over-Qualified or Under-Skilled
Glenda Quintini
01 Sep 2011
Mismatches between workers’ competences and what is required by their job are widespread in OECD countries. Studies that use qualifications as proxies for competences suggest that as many as one in four workers could be over-qualified and as many as...
Paid Parental Leave
Willem Adema, Chris Clarke and Valérie Frey
19 Nov 2015
The United States is at a crossroads in its policies towards the family and gender equality. Currently America provides basic support for children, fathers, and mothers in the form of unpaid parental leave, child-related tax breaks, and limited...
Pension Reform in Chile Revisited
Augusto Iglesias-Palau
08 Apr 2009
The paper describes Chile’s pension reform of 1980, which replaced the existing pay-as-you-go public pension programs by a new funded pension program managed by private companies (the “AFP´s”). It comments on the main results of this reform so far,...
Pension Reform in China
Felix Salditt, Peter Whiteford and Willem Adema
07 Jun 2007
China is currently in the process of developing the largest pension system in the world, and it is doing this at a time of unparalleled economic and demographic transition. The central government has followed a step-by-step approach to develop a...
Pension Schemes for the Self-Employed in OECD Countries
Jongkyun Choi
09 Apr 2009
The self-employed workers make up a small but significant minority of the workforce in many OECD countries. Moreover, transitions into and out of self-employment have become much more common for a larger group of workers. It is therefore of critical...
Pensions, Purchasing-Power Risk, Inflation and Indexation
Edward Whitehouse
28 Jan 2009
The rapid rise in inflation in 2006-07 has attracted attention – once again – both to how pensions systems should react to changes in prices, and to how they do so in practice. Although inflation is now falling as a result of lower commodity prices...
Policies to promote access to good-quality affordable housing in OECD countries
Angelica Salvi del Pero, Willem Adema, Valeria Ferraro and Valérie Frey
26 Feb 2016
This paper develops OECD information on housing policies and the degree to which OECD countries pursue social policy objectives them. Data collected by the OECD shows that most OECD countries provide considerable support to promote access to...
Productivity and wage effects of firm-level collective agreements
Andrea Garnero, Francois Rycx and Isabelle Terraz
11 Feb 2019
How do firm-level collective agreements affect firm performance in a multi-level bargaining system? Using detailed Belgian linked employer-employee panel data, our findings show that firm agreements increase both wage costs and labour productivity...
Promoting social mobility in Austria
Michael Förster and Sebastian Königs
22 Dec 2020
While income inequality in Austria is relatively low compared to many other OECD countries, social mobility lags behind. Socio-economic outcomes carry over strongly from one generation to the next: more than elsewhere, fathers’ earnings are a strong...
Publicly-provided Services and the Distribution of Resources
François Marical, Marco Mira d'Ercole, Maria Vaalavuo and Gerlinde Verbist
21 Dec 2006
This report looks at the effects on the distribution of household income of those government-provided services that confer a personal benefit to users. While most of the comparative evidence of the size and evolution of income inequalities in OECD...
Raising the mobility of third-country nationals in the EU. Effects from naturalisation and long-term resident status
Friedrich Poeschel
10 Jun 2016
This paper is part of the joint project between the Directorate General for Migration and Home Affairs of the European Commission and the OECD’s Directorate for Employment, Labour and Social Affairs on “Review of Labour Migration Policy in Europe”....
Redistribution Policy and Inequality Reduction in OECD Countries
Herwig Immervoll and Linda Richardson
04 Oct 2011
We use a range of data sources to assess if, and to what extent, government redistribution policies have slowed or accelerated the trend towards greater income disparities in the past 20-25 years. In most countries, inequality among “non-elderly”...
Redistribution Policy in Europe and the United States
Herwig Immervoll and Linda Richardson
17 Jun 2013
Working-age individuals and their families have experienced increases in relative income poverty before the Great Recession (GR), and they have also seen significant income losses since the beginning of the downturn in 2007/8. This paper examines the...
Redistribution from a joint income-wealth perspective
Sarah Kuypers, Francesco Figari and Gerlinde Verbist
22 Jan 2021
Redistributive analyses typically use household income as the main reference variable to rank households and to assess their tax liabilities and benefit entitlements. However, the importance of wealth, and the potential redistributive effects of...
Reforming Policies on Foreign Workers in Israel
Adriana Kemp
19 Mar 2010
Since the early 1990s, Israel has enacted a managed migration scheme for low-skilled foreign workers. Originally designed to replace Palestinian cross-border workers from the Occupied Territories in the secondary labour market, in 2007 foreign...
Reforming Retirement-Income Systems
John P. Martin and Edward Whitehouse
30 Jun 2008
1. Reforming pensions looms large over the policy agenda of OECD countries. This is hardly surprising since public spending on pensions accounted on average for 7 per cent of OECD GDP in 2005; and this pension spending effort is set to increase...
