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Showing 61 to 75 of 257 results Save | Export
Li, Yong – Online Submission, 2007
England is the oldest nation of industry revolution and the earliest industrialized country in the world. With the colonization system breakdown and economic giants, the United States, Germany, Japan, etc. rising, today England has already lost former days of elegant appearance. The disadvantageous vocational education is one of essential factor…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economic Development, Vocational Education, Educational History
Murray, Scott; Shillington, Richard – Canadian Literacy and Learning Network, 2011
The authors of this report analyzed the most recent data to illustrate the impact of literacy skills on both the micro- and macro-economic levels. The report explores whether there is a case to be made for direct links between literacy skill and income level. Data relating to the ability to get a job, job retention and promotion, risk of job loss,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Poverty, Economic Impact, Economic Change
Karmel, Tom – National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER), 2009
This paper was presented to a meeting of the Wellington Exchange, an international group of higher education officials, in December 2008. One of the topics of the meeting was around the issue of possible skills shortages emerging as a result of demographic trends, with the ageing of the population of developed countries. The paper argues that this…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Developed Nations, Economic Climate, Vocational Education
Woodard, Colin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
This article presents how the fast expansion of information technology industry in eastern Slovakia is putting a strain on its labor supply. Suddenly, computer-science graduates have become one of the former Eastern Bloc's greatest assets, attracting multinational technology companies hungry for skilled programmers, technicians, and engineers.…
Descriptors: Labor Demands, Foreign Countries, Industry, College Graduates
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van Vught, Frans – Higher Education Management and Policy, 2009
This article analyses the innovation agenda of the European Union (EU), places it in the context of globalisation and explores its foundation in the theoretical innovation systems perspective. It analyses a number of the central policy domains of this agenda: higher education, doctoral education, research and knowledge transfer. In the second part…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Private Financial Support, Global Approach, Research
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Donni, Olivier; Moreau, Nicolas – Journal of Human Resources, 2007
In Chiappori's (1988) collective model of labor supply, hours of work are supposed flexible. In many countries, however, male labor supply does not vary much. In that case, the husband's labor supply is no longer informative about the household decision process and individual preferences. To identify structural components of the model, additional…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Labor Market, French, Labor Supply
Griffin, Tabatha, Ed.; Beddie, Francesca, Ed. – National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER), 2011
One of the challenges facing Australia is the ageing of the population. Of major concern, especially to government, is that the dependency ratio--a measure of the burden that economically active persons carry by supporting dependent persons--will increase significantly unless older people keep working or immigration is used to change the…
Descriptors: Employment Services, Employment Potential, Maturity (Individuals), Age Discrimination
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Lloyd, Caroline – Journal of Education and Work, 2008
Current UK skills policy is centred on the need to drive up qualification obtainment and make the system more employer-led with Sector Skills Councils (SSCs) being given the role of articulating the "voice" of employers. Through a study of recruitment and selection processes in the fitness industry, this paper explores employers'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Human Capital, Recruitment
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Preibisch, Kerry L. – Rural Sociology, 2007
Temporary visa workers are increasingly taking on a heightened profile in Canada, entering the workforce each year in greater numbers than immigrant workers with labor mobility rights (Sharma 2006). This paper examines the incorporation of foreign workers in Canadian horticulture under the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program (SAWP). I argue that…
Descriptors: Industry, Research Methodology, Foreign Workers, Labor
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Ibbott, Peter; Kerr, Don; Beaujot, Roderic – Canadian Journal on Aging, 2006
The future of mandatory retirement is at least partly driven by changing demographics. In Canada, these demographics include slowing population growth, rapid aging, declining rates of labour force participation, and slowing labour force growth. After reviewing the demographic trends and considering alternate scenarios in labour force…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Retirement Benefits, Retirement, Population Growth
Ball, Christopher – Transition from Education through Employment, 1988
Concern about the shortage of engineers in Britain is widespread and has attracted comment. Figures from the Oxford Examining Board indicate that the situation is due to get much worse. The chairman of the board of the National Advisory Body for Public Sector Higher Education discusses the implications of the figures. (Editor/JOW)
Descriptors: Engineers, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Labor Supply
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Thirumurthy, Harsha; Zivin, Joshua Graff; Goldstein, Markus – Journal of Human Resources, 2008
Using longitudinal survey data collected in collaboration with a treatment program, this paper estimates the economic impacts of antiretroviral treatment. The responses in two outcomes are studied: (1) labor supply of treated adult AIDS patients; and (2) labor supply of individuals in patients' households. Within six months after treatment…
Descriptors: Family (Sociological Unit), Labor, Economic Impact, Patients
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Flood, Lennart; Hansen, Jorgen; Wahlberg, Roger – Journal of Human Resources, 2004
A structural, static model of household labor supply and multiple welfare program participation is formulated and estimated. Results suggest that labor supply among two-parent families in Sweden was quite inelastic.
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Labor Supply, Welfare Services, Family Involvement
Richardson, Sue – National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER), 2007
In 2004 NCVER invited proposals from a consortia of researchers to address questions relating to changing work skill needs and work organisation arrangements and their implications for the vocational education and training sector. The National Institute of Labour Studies, Flinders University, and the Centre for Post-compulsory Education and…
Descriptors: Vocational Education, Foreign Countries, Job Skills, Employment Patterns
Zurn, Pascal; Dumont, Jean-Christophe – OECD Publishing (NJ1), 2008
This paper examines health workforce and migration policies in New Zealand, with a special focus on the international recruitment of doctors and nurses. The health workforce in New Zealand, as in all OECD countries, plays a central role in the health system. Nonetheless, maybe more than for any other OECD country, the health workforce in New…
Descriptors: Health Personnel, Physicians, Nurses, Immigration
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