The Italian jobs crisis consists of a high percentage of non-working labour force, matched with a high percentage of discouraged, long-term unemployed and inactive population. Not only a sharp deregulation of the job market is groundless, but even a hypothetic return to expansionary fiscal policy would be insufficient in order to solve such structural problems. Starting from the literature dealing with the “Italian decline”, this article demonstrates that the current problems of the Italian labour market are strictly connected to both (post-crisis) fiscal adjustment and pre-existing features of the industrial branch
The Italian economy performs well below the EU average. The reason is a dramatic and persistent low ...
Using European Union Labour Force Survey data on over 2.5 million workers in Italian regions for the...
TABLE OF CONTENTS: 1. Italy\u2019s Labor Market Figures. \u2013 2. Italy\u2019s new labor reform: Th...
The Italian jobs crisis consists of a high percentage of non-working labour force, matched with a hi...
The Italian jobs crisis consists of a high percentage of non-working labour force, matched with a hi...
During the past twenty years, Italy has realized changes in labour legislation, leading to a decentr...
The dramatic impact of the 2008 crisis on the Italian economy led to policy responses including stru...
Fewer people were hired; firms increased their capital stock but their productivity declined, write ...
The Italian labour market is characterized by deep gender differences and regional variability. The ...
(20.09.2014 draft) Since 2008 the economic crisis has reduced income and drastically brought down em...
The economic crisis has greatly slowed both the increase in the foreign population and the increase ...
The Italian Jobs Act introduced a subsidy for new hirings as well as a new open ended labor contract...
The Italian government has outlined a number of policies aimed at reforming Italy’s labour market, w...
Law 183 of 2014, evocatively named the ‘Jobs Act’, has determined a deep change in the Italian indus...
The Italian labour market is characterized by deep gender differences and regional variability. The ...
The Italian economy performs well below the EU average. The reason is a dramatic and persistent low ...
Using European Union Labour Force Survey data on over 2.5 million workers in Italian regions for the...
TABLE OF CONTENTS: 1. Italy\u2019s Labor Market Figures. \u2013 2. Italy\u2019s new labor reform: Th...
The Italian jobs crisis consists of a high percentage of non-working labour force, matched with a hi...
The Italian jobs crisis consists of a high percentage of non-working labour force, matched with a hi...
During the past twenty years, Italy has realized changes in labour legislation, leading to a decentr...
The dramatic impact of the 2008 crisis on the Italian economy led to policy responses including stru...
Fewer people were hired; firms increased their capital stock but their productivity declined, write ...
The Italian labour market is characterized by deep gender differences and regional variability. The ...
(20.09.2014 draft) Since 2008 the economic crisis has reduced income and drastically brought down em...
The economic crisis has greatly slowed both the increase in the foreign population and the increase ...
The Italian Jobs Act introduced a subsidy for new hirings as well as a new open ended labor contract...
The Italian government has outlined a number of policies aimed at reforming Italy’s labour market, w...
Law 183 of 2014, evocatively named the ‘Jobs Act’, has determined a deep change in the Italian indus...
The Italian labour market is characterized by deep gender differences and regional variability. The ...
The Italian economy performs well below the EU average. The reason is a dramatic and persistent low ...
Using European Union Labour Force Survey data on over 2.5 million workers in Italian regions for the...
TABLE OF CONTENTS: 1. Italy\u2019s Labor Market Figures. \u2013 2. Italy\u2019s new labor reform: Th...