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Labor market --- Labor market --- Marché du travail --- History --- Histoire
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This collection analyses the results of the Jordan Labour Market Panel Survey of 2010 (JLMPS 2010), a major household survey of labour market conditions carried out in Jordan by the Economic Research Forum. The chapters cover topics that are essential to understanding the conditions leading to the Arab Spring.
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This text offers a comprehensive examination of the key labour market issues facing Tunisia, including the size, structure, and evolution of the labour force, employment and unemployment, wage formation, gender differences, education, and migration.
Labor market --- Employees --- Market, Labor --- Supply and demand for labor --- Markets --- Supply and demand
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The Egyptian economy has faced tough challenges since the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings. This book examines the plight of Egypt's most vulnerable groups by focusing on the intersection of gender and economic vulnerability in the labor market, exploring issues such as job access, wage inequality, food security, health status, and many others.
Discrimination in employment --- Labor market --- Egypt --- Economic conditions. --- Employees --- Market, Labor --- Supply and demand for labor --- Markets --- Bias, Job --- Employment discrimination --- Equal employment opportunity --- Equal opportunity in employment --- Fair employment practice --- Job bias --- Job discrimination --- Race discrimination in employment --- Employment (Economic theory) --- Affirmative action programs --- Supply and demand
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The impact of the growth of the local supply of public schools in the post-Colonial period on intergenerational mobility in education is a first-order question in the Arab World. This question is examined in Jordan using a unique dataset that links individual data on own schooling and parents' schooling for adults, from a household survey, with the supply of schools in the subdistrict of birth at the time the individual was of age to enroll, from a school census. The identification strategy exploits the variation in the supply of basic and secondary public schools across cohorts and subdistricts of birth in Jordan, controlling for year and subdistrict-of-birth fixed effects and interactions of governorate and year-of-birth fixed effects. The findings show that the local availability of basic public schools does, in fact, increase intergenerational mobility in education. For instance, a one standard deviation increase in the supply of basic public schools per 1,000 people reduces the father-son and mother-son associations of schooling by 18-20 percent and the father-daughter and mother-daughter associations by 33-44 percent. However, an increase in the local supply of secondary public schools does not seem to have an effect on the intergenerational mobility in education.
Education --- Inequality Of Opportunity --- Intergenerational Mobility --- Middle East --- Supply of Schooling
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The Egyptian economy has faced tough challenges since the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings. This book examines the plight of Egypt's most vulnerable groups by focusing on the intersection of gender and economic vulnerability in the labor market, exploring issues such as job access, wage inequality, food security, health status, and many others.
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Analysing the results of the Egypt Labor Market Panel Survey (ELMPS) from 2012, the chapters in this book cover topics that contribute to understanding the conditions leading to the Egyptian revolution of January 2011.
Labor market --- Labor supply --- Unemployment --- Egypt --- Egypt --- History --- Economic conditions
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Formalizing firms can potentially increase the tax base, expand safety and social protections for workers, create good jobs, and grow the economy. However, the costs and processes of formality may be too challenging for firms, particularly the smallest firms, to bear. Thus, informal firms may not be able to survive the transition to formality and attempts to expand formality may be harmful and counterproductive to job creation and growth. This paper investigates the potential for currently informal firms to formalize in the Arab Republic of Egypt. The paper compares the characteristics and dynamics of micro and small non-agricultural firms by formality and identifies the extent of overlap and potential for formalization. The analysis finds that, beyond firm size, the basic and easily observable characteristics of firms are not closely linked to formality. Firm age, productivity, and owner characteristics such as education are strongly predictive of formality. There is some overlap in the predicted probability of formality between formal and informal firms, suggesting some potential for formalization. The paper develops profiles (groups and clusters) of similar firms to identify those with a higher potential for formalization. In terms of dynamics, new firms tend to be informal and informal firms are more likely to exit (close), but conditional on firm survival, employment growth is similar across formal and informal firms.
Firms --- Formality --- Informality --- Microenterprises --- Private Sector Economics --- Small and Medium Size Enterprise --- Small and Medium Size Enterprises --- SMEs
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Arab countries --- Arab countries --- Arab countries --- Economic policy --- -Politics and government --- -Commerce.
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