Unemployment in the OECD.

This article examines the course of unemployment in OECD countries during the recent recession. The severity of the recession and the strength of macro policy responses varied from country to country. However, even after correcting for these differences, unemployment experiences were various. Unempl...

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Váldodahkkit: Amable, B, Mayhew, K
Materiálatiipa: Journal article
Giella:English
Almmustuhtton: Oxford University Press 2011
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author Amable, B
Mayhew, K
author_facet Amable, B
Mayhew, K
author_sort Amable, B
collection OXFORD
description This article examines the course of unemployment in OECD countries during the recent recession. The severity of the recession and the strength of macro policy responses varied from country to country. However, even after correcting for these differences, unemployment experiences were various. Unemployment generally rose by less in those countries which had strict employment protection legislation, as it did in those countries with relatively high collective-bargaining coverage. Various forms of work-sharing also helped some countries to dampen the rise in unemployment. So did increasing the generosity of out-of-work benefit arrangements. The latter finding suggests that search theoretic approaches need to be modified. Institutions do matter and not just in the short run. Hysteresis effects could project their influence into the medium term.
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spelling oxford-uuid:64a6d104-f173-4dc2-9163-55c09e9945572022-03-26T18:20:12ZUnemployment in the OECD.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:64a6d104-f173-4dc2-9163-55c09e994557EnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrintsOxford University Press2011Amable, BMayhew, KThis article examines the course of unemployment in OECD countries during the recent recession. The severity of the recession and the strength of macro policy responses varied from country to country. However, even after correcting for these differences, unemployment experiences were various. Unemployment generally rose by less in those countries which had strict employment protection legislation, as it did in those countries with relatively high collective-bargaining coverage. Various forms of work-sharing also helped some countries to dampen the rise in unemployment. So did increasing the generosity of out-of-work benefit arrangements. The latter finding suggests that search theoretic approaches need to be modified. Institutions do matter and not just in the short run. Hysteresis effects could project their influence into the medium term.
spellingShingle Amable, B
Mayhew, K
Unemployment in the OECD.
title Unemployment in the OECD.
title_full Unemployment in the OECD.
title_fullStr Unemployment in the OECD.
title_full_unstemmed Unemployment in the OECD.
title_short Unemployment in the OECD.
title_sort unemployment in the oecd
work_keys_str_mv AT amableb unemploymentintheoecd
AT mayhewk unemploymentintheoecd