Switzerland is a small country with rich cultural and geographic diversity. The Swiss unemployment rate is low, at only about half the OECD average. The rate has remained at that level since the year 2000, despite a massive increase in the foreign labor force, the Great Recession, and a currency appreciation shock, demonstrating the Swiss labor market’s impressive resiliency. However, challenges do exist, particularly related to earnings and employment gaps among foreign and native workers, as well as a narrowing but persistent gender pay gap. Additionally, regional differences in unemployment are significant
The analysis of the Swiss labor market poses a methodological challenge. On the one hand, Switzerlan...
The topic of this paper has been motivated by the rising unemployment rate of low-skilled relative t...
Discrimination of ethnic minorities in hiring decisions in the labour market has become a common phe...
This paper presents a general survey of the Swiss economy. It emphasises the various factors that ha...
The increase in unemployment to relatively high levels for Switzerland in the 1990s gave rise to two...
Unemployment in Switzerland has not been a very interesting phenomenon until the end of the eighties...
Cross-sectional literature has shown that in Switzerland as elsewhere immigrants are more penalized ...
Since the beginning of the s, unemployment has become again a source of worry among the OECD countri...
Regional disparities in the unemployment represent for Switzerland a new regional problem. The avera...
Switzerland is often mentioned as an unusual “success story”, particularly in terms of its handling ...
ABSTRACT ▪ In most European countries, there is some evidence that jobs became, and to an even great...
Abstract The topic of this paper has been motivated by the rising unemployment rate of low-skilled r...
The labor market today is one of the most important markets of the developed industrial society, in ...
During the last two to three decades, labour markets in most industrialised coun-tries were characte...
International students are potential highly skilled workers who can enter in their host country’s la...
The analysis of the Swiss labor market poses a methodological challenge. On the one hand, Switzerlan...
The topic of this paper has been motivated by the rising unemployment rate of low-skilled relative t...
Discrimination of ethnic minorities in hiring decisions in the labour market has become a common phe...
This paper presents a general survey of the Swiss economy. It emphasises the various factors that ha...
The increase in unemployment to relatively high levels for Switzerland in the 1990s gave rise to two...
Unemployment in Switzerland has not been a very interesting phenomenon until the end of the eighties...
Cross-sectional literature has shown that in Switzerland as elsewhere immigrants are more penalized ...
Since the beginning of the s, unemployment has become again a source of worry among the OECD countri...
Regional disparities in the unemployment represent for Switzerland a new regional problem. The avera...
Switzerland is often mentioned as an unusual “success story”, particularly in terms of its handling ...
ABSTRACT ▪ In most European countries, there is some evidence that jobs became, and to an even great...
Abstract The topic of this paper has been motivated by the rising unemployment rate of low-skilled r...
The labor market today is one of the most important markets of the developed industrial society, in ...
During the last two to three decades, labour markets in most industrialised coun-tries were characte...
International students are potential highly skilled workers who can enter in their host country’s la...
The analysis of the Swiss labor market poses a methodological challenge. On the one hand, Switzerlan...
The topic of this paper has been motivated by the rising unemployment rate of low-skilled relative t...
Discrimination of ethnic minorities in hiring decisions in the labour market has become a common phe...