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Temporary Work in Poland: Who Gets the Jobs?

Research output: Working paper

Published

Standard

Temporary Work in Poland: Who Gets the Jobs? / Ingham, H; Ingham, M.
Lancaster University: The Department of Economics, 2010. (Economics Working Paper Series).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Ingham, H & Ingham, M 2010 'Temporary Work in Poland: Who Gets the Jobs?' Economics Working Paper Series, The Department of Economics, Lancaster University.

APA

Ingham, H., & Ingham, M. (2010). Temporary Work in Poland: Who Gets the Jobs? (Economics Working Paper Series). The Department of Economics.

Vancouver

Ingham H, Ingham M. Temporary Work in Poland: Who Gets the Jobs? Lancaster University: The Department of Economics. 2010. (Economics Working Paper Series).

Author

Ingham, H ; Ingham, M. / Temporary Work in Poland: Who Gets the Jobs?. Lancaster University : The Department of Economics, 2010. (Economics Working Paper Series).

Bibtex

@techreport{bd931e7006234fa98e79ff3b755a83af,
title = "Temporary Work in Poland: Who Gets the Jobs?",
abstract = "In recent years, Poland witnessed a dramatic decline in its unemployment rate and, from having had one of the worst jobless records in the EU-27, the country now posts a figure below the Union average. However, this remarkable turnaround has apparently been driven by amendments to the country's Labour Code, which have generated an enormous increase in temporary working. On the basis of gross flow data from five consecutive annual panels from the Labour Force Survey, the paper identifies a strong link between this growth and the fall in unemployment. A multinomial logit model then reveals the flows were most heavily concentrated among males and the less well educated. There was also some evidence that fixed-term work lured previously discouraged, inactive individuals back into the labour market. However, the requirement that Poland aligns its temporary employment legislation with that of the EU could conceivable lead to at least a partial reversal of these developments.",
keywords = "Unemployment, Temporary Work, Labour Market Dynamics",
author = "H Ingham and M Ingham",
year = "2010",
language = "English",
series = "Economics Working Paper Series",
publisher = "The Department of Economics",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "The Department of Economics",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Temporary Work in Poland: Who Gets the Jobs?

AU - Ingham, H

AU - Ingham, M

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - In recent years, Poland witnessed a dramatic decline in its unemployment rate and, from having had one of the worst jobless records in the EU-27, the country now posts a figure below the Union average. However, this remarkable turnaround has apparently been driven by amendments to the country's Labour Code, which have generated an enormous increase in temporary working. On the basis of gross flow data from five consecutive annual panels from the Labour Force Survey, the paper identifies a strong link between this growth and the fall in unemployment. A multinomial logit model then reveals the flows were most heavily concentrated among males and the less well educated. There was also some evidence that fixed-term work lured previously discouraged, inactive individuals back into the labour market. However, the requirement that Poland aligns its temporary employment legislation with that of the EU could conceivable lead to at least a partial reversal of these developments.

AB - In recent years, Poland witnessed a dramatic decline in its unemployment rate and, from having had one of the worst jobless records in the EU-27, the country now posts a figure below the Union average. However, this remarkable turnaround has apparently been driven by amendments to the country's Labour Code, which have generated an enormous increase in temporary working. On the basis of gross flow data from five consecutive annual panels from the Labour Force Survey, the paper identifies a strong link between this growth and the fall in unemployment. A multinomial logit model then reveals the flows were most heavily concentrated among males and the less well educated. There was also some evidence that fixed-term work lured previously discouraged, inactive individuals back into the labour market. However, the requirement that Poland aligns its temporary employment legislation with that of the EU could conceivable lead to at least a partial reversal of these developments.

KW - Unemployment

KW - Temporary Work

KW - Labour Market Dynamics

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Economics Working Paper Series

BT - Temporary Work in Poland: Who Gets the Jobs?

PB - The Department of Economics

CY - Lancaster University

ER -