This paper is motivated by the lack of any obvious relationship between aggregate poverty and unemployment in Great Britain. We derive a framework based on individuals' risks of unemployment and poverty, and how these vary over the economic cycle. Analysing the British Household Panel Survey for 1991-96, we are able to square the micro evidence - that unemployment matters for poverty - with the macro picture - that there's no strong link. We then go on to identify which household and individual characteristics are associated with whether an individual's poverty risk is vulnerable to the economic cycle
This paper uses longitudinal data from the BHPS, waves 1-8, to document low-income dynamics and pers...
We pursue an economic approach to analysing poverty. This requires a focus on the variables that ind...
Dynamics research presents a dramatically more comprehensive understanding of poverty than point-in-...
This paper is motivated by the lack of any obvious relationship between aggregate poverty and unempl...
We pursue an economic approach to analysing poverty. This requires a focus on the variables that ind...
The relationships between employment, education, opportunity, social exclusion and poverty are centr...
In this paper we examine the evidence on how dynamic mechanisms, which include earnings and income m...
Relative poverty in the UK has risen massively since 1979 mainly because of increasing worklessness,...
'Scholars emphasize that poverty in Britain has risen sharply since the late 1970s. Meanwhile in the...
Structural changes in the labour markets of developed economies, and changes in their institutional ...
This paper considers the issue of unemployment one of the most pressing issues facing the UK and oth...
This paper fits within a broader research programme concerned with the processes that link labour ma...
There is growing evidence of the problematic nature of the UK’s ‘flexible labour market’ with rising...
There is growing concern in many developed economies that the benefits of economic growth are not sh...
The report analyses the employment and welfare system in Stoke -on -Trent arguing that the Stoke eco...
This paper uses longitudinal data from the BHPS, waves 1-8, to document low-income dynamics and pers...
We pursue an economic approach to analysing poverty. This requires a focus on the variables that ind...
Dynamics research presents a dramatically more comprehensive understanding of poverty than point-in-...
This paper is motivated by the lack of any obvious relationship between aggregate poverty and unempl...
We pursue an economic approach to analysing poverty. This requires a focus on the variables that ind...
The relationships between employment, education, opportunity, social exclusion and poverty are centr...
In this paper we examine the evidence on how dynamic mechanisms, which include earnings and income m...
Relative poverty in the UK has risen massively since 1979 mainly because of increasing worklessness,...
'Scholars emphasize that poverty in Britain has risen sharply since the late 1970s. Meanwhile in the...
Structural changes in the labour markets of developed economies, and changes in their institutional ...
This paper considers the issue of unemployment one of the most pressing issues facing the UK and oth...
This paper fits within a broader research programme concerned with the processes that link labour ma...
There is growing evidence of the problematic nature of the UK’s ‘flexible labour market’ with rising...
There is growing concern in many developed economies that the benefits of economic growth are not sh...
The report analyses the employment and welfare system in Stoke -on -Trent arguing that the Stoke eco...
This paper uses longitudinal data from the BHPS, waves 1-8, to document low-income dynamics and pers...
We pursue an economic approach to analysing poverty. This requires a focus on the variables that ind...
Dynamics research presents a dramatically more comprehensive understanding of poverty than point-in-...