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At Home and Abroad: U.S. Labor Market Performance in International Perspective: U.S. Labor Market Performance in International Perspective

At Home and Abroad: U.S. Labor Market Performance in International Perspective: U.S. Labor Market Performance in International Perspective

Francine D. Blau
0/5 ( ratings)
Throughout the latter part of the 20th century, the U.S. labor market performed differently than the labor markets of the world's other advanced industrialized societies. In the early 1970s, the United States had higher unemployment rates than its Western European counterparts. But after two oil crises, rapid technological change, and globalization rocked the world's economies, unemployment fell in the United States, while increasing dramatically in other nations. At the same time, wage inequality widened more in the United States than in Europe. InAt Home and Abroad, Cornell University economists Francine D. Blau and Lawrence M. Kahn examine the reasons for these striking dissimilarities between the United States and its economic allies. Comparing countries, the authors find that governments and unions play a far greater role in the labor market in Europe than they do in the United States. It is much more difficult to lay off workers in Europe than in the United States, unemployment insurance is more generous in Europe, and many fewer Americans than Europeans are covered by collective bargaining agreements. Interventionist labor market institutions in Europe compress wages, thus contributing to the lower levels of wage inequality in the European Union than in the United States."
Language
English
Pages
326
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Russell Sage Foundation
Release
April 05, 2007
ISBN
0871540827
ISBN 13
9780871540829

At Home and Abroad: U.S. Labor Market Performance in International Perspective: U.S. Labor Market Performance in International Perspective

Francine D. Blau
0/5 ( ratings)
Throughout the latter part of the 20th century, the U.S. labor market performed differently than the labor markets of the world's other advanced industrialized societies. In the early 1970s, the United States had higher unemployment rates than its Western European counterparts. But after two oil crises, rapid technological change, and globalization rocked the world's economies, unemployment fell in the United States, while increasing dramatically in other nations. At the same time, wage inequality widened more in the United States than in Europe. InAt Home and Abroad, Cornell University economists Francine D. Blau and Lawrence M. Kahn examine the reasons for these striking dissimilarities between the United States and its economic allies. Comparing countries, the authors find that governments and unions play a far greater role in the labor market in Europe than they do in the United States. It is much more difficult to lay off workers in Europe than in the United States, unemployment insurance is more generous in Europe, and many fewer Americans than Europeans are covered by collective bargaining agreements. Interventionist labor market institutions in Europe compress wages, thus contributing to the lower levels of wage inequality in the European Union than in the United States."
Language
English
Pages
326
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Russell Sage Foundation
Release
April 05, 2007
ISBN
0871540827
ISBN 13
9780871540829

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