European University Institute Library

Designing inclusion, tools to raise low-end pay and employment in private enterprise, edited by Edmund S. Phelps

Label
Designing inclusion, tools to raise low-end pay and employment in private enterprise, edited by Edmund S. Phelps
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Designing inclusion
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
252482966
Responsibility statement
edited by Edmund S. Phelps
Series statement
Cambridge Social Sciences eBooks
Sub title
tools to raise low-end pay and employment in private enterprise
Summary
An inclusion failure has become highly visible in the advanced economies of the West. Too many able-bodied people are subject to chronic joblessness and, when employed, cannot earn a living remotely like that in the mainstream of the population. One policy response has been to give such workers a range of goods and services without charge, another has been to single out some groups for tax credits tied to their earnings. However, many of the welfare programs actually weaken people's incentive to participate in the labour force and wage-income tax credits appear to have made hardly a dent in joblessness. This volume brings together leading economists to present four studies of methods to rebuild self-sufficiency and boosting employment: a graduated employment subsidy, a hiring subsidy and subsidies for training and education. It is of interest to anyone with a serious interest in the economics of subsidies to raise inclusion.--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Introduction / Edmund S. Phelps -- Low-wage employment subsidies in labor-turnover model of the "natural rate" / Hian Teck Hoon and Edmund S. Phelps -- Taxes, subsidies and equilibrium labor market outcomes / Dale Mortensen and Christopher Pissarides -- Learning-by-doing versus on-the-job training: using variation induced by the EITC to distinguish between models of skill formation / James J. Heckman, Lance Lochner, and Ricardo Cossa -- Unemployment vouchers versus low-wage subsidies / J. Michael Orszag and Dennis J. Snower
Content
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