Abstract In the 1980s, fifty years after the Great Depression industrial countries came again to be haunted with the spectre of mass unemployment. The unemployment situation, into the 1990s, continues to be dire in several European Union countries. Double digit unemployment rates are currently being recorded by Belgium, Denmark, France, Italy, with near double-digit rates in several others including Britain, Germany and Sweden. On the most recent available official data, nearly a quarter of the labour force in Spain and Finland are unemploye
Unemployment has been very high in a number of European coun-tries for almost three decades. Many ec...
Bill Mitchell and Joan Muysken explore the evolution of economic theory from a construction of unemp...
The conventional wisdom is that high European unemployment is the result of job markets that are rig...
Abstract In the 1980s, fifty years after the Great Depression industrial countries came again to ...
Average unemployment in Europe today is relatively high compared with OECD countries outside Europe....
UNEMPLOYMENT in Europe has reached levels in this decade that have not been seen since the Great Dep...
Why has unemployment fallen in some European countries but not in others? To answer this question, R...
Average unemployment in Europe today is relatively high compared with OECD countries outside Europe....
A serious blemish of the present economic era is the high rates of unemployment which currently affl...
Sixteen years into the transition, the problem of high joblessness has not been solved. Of the three...
Jean-Paul Fitoussi and Olivier Passets report analyzes the period between 1983 and 1999. They have ...
In this paper we study the contribution of inflows and outflows to the dynamics of unemployment in t...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of unemployment patterns in the OECD countries from the 19...
One of the main characteristics of the eighties was the high level of unemployment in the EEC countr...
The main purpose of this paper is to review the lessons of the “Golden Age” with respect to establis...
Unemployment has been very high in a number of European coun-tries for almost three decades. Many ec...
Bill Mitchell and Joan Muysken explore the evolution of economic theory from a construction of unemp...
The conventional wisdom is that high European unemployment is the result of job markets that are rig...
Abstract In the 1980s, fifty years after the Great Depression industrial countries came again to ...
Average unemployment in Europe today is relatively high compared with OECD countries outside Europe....
UNEMPLOYMENT in Europe has reached levels in this decade that have not been seen since the Great Dep...
Why has unemployment fallen in some European countries but not in others? To answer this question, R...
Average unemployment in Europe today is relatively high compared with OECD countries outside Europe....
A serious blemish of the present economic era is the high rates of unemployment which currently affl...
Sixteen years into the transition, the problem of high joblessness has not been solved. Of the three...
Jean-Paul Fitoussi and Olivier Passets report analyzes the period between 1983 and 1999. They have ...
In this paper we study the contribution of inflows and outflows to the dynamics of unemployment in t...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of unemployment patterns in the OECD countries from the 19...
One of the main characteristics of the eighties was the high level of unemployment in the EEC countr...
The main purpose of this paper is to review the lessons of the “Golden Age” with respect to establis...
Unemployment has been very high in a number of European coun-tries for almost three decades. Many ec...
Bill Mitchell and Joan Muysken explore the evolution of economic theory from a construction of unemp...
The conventional wisdom is that high European unemployment is the result of job markets that are rig...