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Who loses in the downturn? [electronic resource] : economic crisis, employment and income distribution / edited by Herwig Immervoll, Andreas Peichl, Konstantinos Tatsiramos.

Contributor(s): Immervoll, Herwig | Peichl, Andreas | Tatsiramos, KonstantinosMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Research in labor economics ; v. 32.Publication details: Bingley, U.K. : Emerald, 2011Description: 1 online resource (xvi, 286 p.) : illISBN: 9780857247506 (electronic bk.) :Subject(s): Business & Economics -- Labor | Economics of industrial organisation | Labour economics | Income distribution | Labor market | Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009Additional physical formats: No titleDDC classification: 339.2 LOC classification: HC79.I5 | W46 2011Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Recent trends in income inequality / Timothy M. Smeeding, Jeffrey P. Thompson -- Consumption and income poverty over the business cycle / Bruce D. Meyer, James X. Sullivan -- Patterns of employment disadvantage in a recession / Richard Berthoud, Lina Cardona Sosa -- Job flows, demographics, and the great recession / Eva Sierminska, Yelena Takhtamanova -- The impact of the great recession on the Italian labour market / Francesco D'Amuri -- Reversed roles? : wage and employment effects of the current crisis / Lutz Bellmann, Hans-Dieter Gerner -- The economic crisis, public sector pay and the income distribution / Tim Callan, Brian Nolan, John Walsh -- Automatic stabilizers, economic crisis and income distribution in Europe / Mathias Dolls, Clemens Fuest, Andreas Peichl -- Economic downturn and stress testing European welfare systems / Francesco Figari, Andrea Salvatori, Holly Sutherland.
Summary: Economic events such as the recent global economic crisis can have substantial effects on the distribution of resources at the individual and household levels. Identification of appropriate and timely policy responses that support vulnerable groups is hampered by how little is known about the likely patterns of losses early on during the downturn. This volume contains fresh knowledge on the effects of the economic downturn on employment and income distribution. It contains 9 original research papers from both Europe and the US, including illustrations of forward-looking simulation methods that can be used before detailed data on actual household experiences become available. These papers offer new insights into issues such as how wages, employment and incomes are affected by the crisis, which demographic groups are most vulnerable in the recession, how well the welfare system protects the newly unemployed and how consumption and income poverty change over the business cycle.
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Not for loan EBKEM405

Recent trends in income inequality / Timothy M. Smeeding, Jeffrey P. Thompson -- Consumption and income poverty over the business cycle / Bruce D. Meyer, James X. Sullivan -- Patterns of employment disadvantage in a recession / Richard Berthoud, Lina Cardona Sosa -- Job flows, demographics, and the great recession / Eva Sierminska, Yelena Takhtamanova -- The impact of the great recession on the Italian labour market / Francesco D'Amuri -- Reversed roles? : wage and employment effects of the current crisis / Lutz Bellmann, Hans-Dieter Gerner -- The economic crisis, public sector pay and the income distribution / Tim Callan, Brian Nolan, John Walsh -- Automatic stabilizers, economic crisis and income distribution in Europe / Mathias Dolls, Clemens Fuest, Andreas Peichl -- Economic downturn and stress testing European welfare systems / Francesco Figari, Andrea Salvatori, Holly Sutherland.

Economic events such as the recent global economic crisis can have substantial effects on the distribution of resources at the individual and household levels. Identification of appropriate and timely policy responses that support vulnerable groups is hampered by how little is known about the likely patterns of losses early on during the downturn. This volume contains fresh knowledge on the effects of the economic downturn on employment and income distribution. It contains 9 original research papers from both Europe and the US, including illustrations of forward-looking simulation methods that can be used before detailed data on actual household experiences become available. These papers offer new insights into issues such as how wages, employment and incomes are affected by the crisis, which demographic groups are most vulnerable in the recession, how well the welfare system protects the newly unemployed and how consumption and income poverty change over the business cycle.

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