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24-November-2010
English, , 82kb
This country note highlights key findings and challenges for Australia from the synthesis on Sickness, Disability and Work: Breaking the Barriers.
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24-November-2010
English, , 141kb
This country note highlights key findings and challenges for Sweden from the synthesis on Sickness, Disability and Work: Breaking the Barriers.
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24-November-2010
English, , 141kb
This country note highlights key findings and challenges for Norway from the synthesis on Sickness, Disability and Work: Breaking the Barriers.
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24-November-2010
English, , 304kb
This country note highlights key findings and challenges for United Kingdom from the synthesis on Sickness, Disability and Work: Breaking the Barriers.
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Too many workers leave the labour market permanently due to health problems or disability, and too few people with reduced work capacity manage to remain in employment. This report, the last in the OECD series Sickness, Disability and Work: Breaking the Barriers, synthesises the project’s findin
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24-November-2010
English, , 141kb
This country note highlights key findings and challenges for Ireland from the synthesis on Sickness, Disability and Work: Breaking the Barriers.
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24-November-2010
English, , 142kb
This country note highlights key findings and challenges for Netherlands from the synthesis on Sickness, Disability and Work: Breaking the Barriers.
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9-November-2010
English, , 1,066kb
This note presents main issues on the role of growth and employment/unemployment developments in explaining recent income inequality trends in Brazil, China, India and South Africa, and discusses the roles played by labour market and social policies in shaping and addressing these inequalities.
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The conference aims to address the links between labour market outcomes and inequality in emerging economies and to consider which labour market and social policies can help governments in alleviating poverty and in promoting more inclusive societies.
Macro-level changes can have substantial effects on the distribution of resources at the household level. While it is possible to speculate about which groups are likely to be hardest-hit, detailed distributional studies are still largely backward-looking.
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