Research Catalog

Labor markets and integrating national economies

Title
Labor markets and integrating national economies / Ronald G. Ehrenberg.
Author
Ehrenberg, Ronald G.
Publication
Washington, D.C. : Brookings Institution, [1994], ©1994.

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TextRequest in advance HD5706 .E38 1994Off-site

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Description
xxvi, 126 pages; 24 cm.
Summary
"The international economy is becoming increasingly integrated. The passage of the North American Free Trade Act and the successful completion of the final round of negotiations under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade have helped to reduce the barriers to trade and capital mobility. Other policies, such as those being pursued by the European Union nations to promote the mobility of workers across national boundaries, play an important role in international economic integration." "This book, part of the Brookings Integrating National Economies series, provides an in-depth examination of the role of labor markets in the international economy. Ronald G. Ehrenberg evaluates a wide range of labor market characteristics and their effects on trade flows, capital mobility, and labor mobility. He highlights what these characteristics are, how they vary across nations, and how they can help reduce barriers to integration. To illustrate the variations that exist across nations, Ehrenberg describes the labor market practices of the United States, Canada, the Western European nations, and Mexico. He discusses the pressures that often arise from integration to change labor market institutions and policies and explores how certain policies influence the pace at which integration proceeds." "Ultimately, economic integration, either with or without free labor mobility, poses issues relating to the trade-offs between efficiency and equity and to what each nation judges to be desirable levels of labor market standards. Ehrenberg argues that economic integration can take place between nations even though they may have very different levels of labor market standards and policies. However, he concludes, the political process may allow the benefits from increased trade and labor-capital mobility to be fully achieved only if nations systematically develop ways to have some of their labor market policies converge."--BOOK JACKET.
Series Statement
Integrating national economies
Uniform Title
Integrating national economies.
Subjects
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 111-119) and index.
Contents
1. Introduction -- Pros and Cons of Increased Economic Integration -- Outline of the Book -- Characteristics of Labor Markets -- Unemployment Insurance: An Example -- Flexible Exchange Rates, Tax Incidence, and Economic Integration. Appendix: The European Community and the Labor Market -- 2. Hours of Work and the Statutes That Govern Them -- Hours of Work -- Statutes That Influence Hours of Work -- Likelihood of the Convergence of Hours of Work and the Statutes Governing Them -- 3. Social and Private Insurance -- Retirement Systems -- Medical Care -- 4. Employment Standards -- Minimum Wages -- Compulsory Schooling and Child Labor Laws -- Occupational Safety and Health Standards -- 5. Policies to Facilitate Labor Market Adjustments -- Advance Notice of and Severance Pay for Job Displacement -- Policies That Partially Compensate for Job Loss -- Training and Job Placement Programs -- 6. Who Can Work and How Working Conditions Are Established -- Immigration Policies -- Occupational Qualifications -- Collective Bargaining and Worker Participation -- 7. Looking to the Future -- Lessons from the U.S. Experience -- Efficiency, Equity, and Political Considerations -- Compliance. Comments / Stephen Nickell and Richard B. Freeman.
ISBN
  • 0815722567 (cl) :
  • 0815722575 (pa) :
LCCN
94014187
OCLC
  • 30157362
  • ocm30157362
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries