If a firm wants to reduce its workforce, it may dismiss some of its workers. Altematively, it may make workers eligible for disability benefits. Upon examination these workers formally satisfy the conditions for disability enrolment. Because these conditions allow for a rather liberal interpretation of disability, these workers could have stayed on their job had they not become redundant. We use data on Dutch firms to show that at the end of the 1980s about 10 percent of the observed inflow into disability were in fact dismissals
in the Netherlands, a situation has developed in which there is one permanently disabled person for ...
Objectives This study aimed to examine the contribution of employer characteristics to continued emp...
AbstractThis article presents a unique analysis of how activation agencies in the Netherlands cope w...
At the beginning of the nineties the high rate of absenteeism and the rising number of employees dra...
In this paper, we estimate the degree of substitution between enrolment into Disability Insurance (D...
In this paper, we estimate the degree of substitution between enrolment into Disability Insurance (D...
While a large share of Disability Insurance recipients in OECD countries are expected to recover, ou...
The application of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) to employer reductions-in-force (RIFs) ...
In Search of Effective Disability Policy examines the potentials of two very different strategies of...
The Netherlands is well known for its high employment growth and corresponding low unemployment rate...
The trends in the composition of the disability insurance (DI) program show the strong increase in t...
Background: Today, work disability is one of the greatest social and labour market challenges for po...
Abstract Background Today, work disability is one of the greatest social and labour market challenge...
Though the British and Dutch approaches to disability in the construction sector exhibit common feat...
Abstract Background Work disability is a major problem for both the worker and society. To explore t...
in the Netherlands, a situation has developed in which there is one permanently disabled person for ...
Objectives This study aimed to examine the contribution of employer characteristics to continued emp...
AbstractThis article presents a unique analysis of how activation agencies in the Netherlands cope w...
At the beginning of the nineties the high rate of absenteeism and the rising number of employees dra...
In this paper, we estimate the degree of substitution between enrolment into Disability Insurance (D...
In this paper, we estimate the degree of substitution between enrolment into Disability Insurance (D...
While a large share of Disability Insurance recipients in OECD countries are expected to recover, ou...
The application of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) to employer reductions-in-force (RIFs) ...
In Search of Effective Disability Policy examines the potentials of two very different strategies of...
The Netherlands is well known for its high employment growth and corresponding low unemployment rate...
The trends in the composition of the disability insurance (DI) program show the strong increase in t...
Background: Today, work disability is one of the greatest social and labour market challenges for po...
Abstract Background Today, work disability is one of the greatest social and labour market challenge...
Though the British and Dutch approaches to disability in the construction sector exhibit common feat...
Abstract Background Work disability is a major problem for both the worker and society. To explore t...
in the Netherlands, a situation has developed in which there is one permanently disabled person for ...
Objectives This study aimed to examine the contribution of employer characteristics to continued emp...
AbstractThis article presents a unique analysis of how activation agencies in the Netherlands cope w...