Job creation and destruction estimates are made for Northern Ireland manufacturing using the ARD database. International comparisons suggest job creation and destruction rates in Northern Ireland were below those elsewhere. Job turnover rates exhibit the standard properties, however, with counter-cyclical job destruction and pro-cyclical job creation. A number of other key results emerge. First, small firms are the only size band for which the net change in employment was positive. Second, job turnover in small firms is less cyclical than that in larger companies. Third, firm contraction and expansion were more important sources of job creation and destruction in Northern Ireland than in the UK as a whole.
We use a new database, the National Establishment Time Series (NETS), to revisit the debate about th...
Summary. The paper analyses employment changes in the stock of manufacturing plants in Ireland which...
We document the nature of structural changes in employment to understand “jobless” growth in Irish M...
While growth in output and employment remains relatively strong in the Irish economy, there has been...
Abstract: Using an annual employment survey data set we construct aggregate job flow rates for the I...
Using data from the Workplace Industrial Relations Surveys of 1980, 1984, and 1990, the authors inve...
The population of the Republic of Ireland is now 3.2 million, just about the same as it was in 1921 ...
In a country with a small domestic market such as Ireland’s, the development of exports is the key ...
Employment change in Irish manufacturing industry is disaggregated into its basic components of open...
In this paper we investigate the driving factors behind the diverse employment performances of indig...
The extraordinary growth of the Irish economy since the mid-1990s - the 'Celtic Tiger' - has attract...
The extraordinary growth of the Irish economy since the mid-1990s—the ‘Celtic Tiger’—has attracted a...
This article is motivated by a very simple question – ‘what types of firms create the most jobs in t...
For decades an objective of policy in Ireland has been to lower the rate of unemployment - indeed to...
peer-reviewedThe extraordinary growth of the Irish economy since the mid-1990s - the 'Celtic Tiger' ...
We use a new database, the National Establishment Time Series (NETS), to revisit the debate about th...
Summary. The paper analyses employment changes in the stock of manufacturing plants in Ireland which...
We document the nature of structural changes in employment to understand “jobless” growth in Irish M...
While growth in output and employment remains relatively strong in the Irish economy, there has been...
Abstract: Using an annual employment survey data set we construct aggregate job flow rates for the I...
Using data from the Workplace Industrial Relations Surveys of 1980, 1984, and 1990, the authors inve...
The population of the Republic of Ireland is now 3.2 million, just about the same as it was in 1921 ...
In a country with a small domestic market such as Ireland’s, the development of exports is the key ...
Employment change in Irish manufacturing industry is disaggregated into its basic components of open...
In this paper we investigate the driving factors behind the diverse employment performances of indig...
The extraordinary growth of the Irish economy since the mid-1990s - the 'Celtic Tiger' - has attract...
The extraordinary growth of the Irish economy since the mid-1990s—the ‘Celtic Tiger’—has attracted a...
This article is motivated by a very simple question – ‘what types of firms create the most jobs in t...
For decades an objective of policy in Ireland has been to lower the rate of unemployment - indeed to...
peer-reviewedThe extraordinary growth of the Irish economy since the mid-1990s - the 'Celtic Tiger' ...
We use a new database, the National Establishment Time Series (NETS), to revisit the debate about th...
Summary. The paper analyses employment changes in the stock of manufacturing plants in Ireland which...
We document the nature of structural changes in employment to understand “jobless” growth in Irish M...