The Chilean Labor Market


Book Description

Kirsten Sehnbruch uses the case study of Chile to show the failures and inner-working of neo-liberal labour policy. She shows in detail what the real policy issue should be, namely the creation of proper institutions and of a corps of competent professionals with relevant skills and powers to operate them.







Labor Force Participation in Chile


Book Description

Gains in labor force participation rates in Chile have slowed in recent years. We examine their determinants using a cohort-model analysis. Allowing for both age- and cohort-specific effects in the context of a seemingly unrelated regression equations (SURE) approach, we find that age factors play an important role in determining participation decisions, especially for males. For females, we find that strong positive time trends dominate the downward pressure from demographics, although those trends have recently dissipated. In addition, we find that both cohort effects and the business cycle shape participation decisions. Using our cohort-based analysis, we construct projections of participation rates, which suggest population aging will put downward pressure on labor inputs, and thus potential output, in coming years. Further increases in female labor force participation—supported by policies— could more than offset the downward pressure from demographics.










Chile's Labor Markets in an Era of Adjustment


Book Description

A segmented labor market, an inadequate institutional framework for labor, and a distorted real exchange rate were at the root of persistent open unemployment in Chile. A better macroeconomic management and a more adequate regulatory framework for the labor market were critical to successful adjustment in the 1980s.




The Chilean Labor Market


Book Description




Labor in Chile


Book Description




Assessing the Macroeconomic Impact of Structural Reforms in Chile


Book Description

This study investigates the likely macroeconomic impact of various structural reforms that align the Chilean regulatory framework with international best practices. In this context, the analysis: i) presents a comparison across a large set of structural indicators; ii) identifies policy gaps with respect to OECD countries; and iii) provides quantification of the likely growth and fiscal impact of policy reforms needed to close the gaps. Chile’s economy is likely to benefit from streamlining business regulation and licensing, strengthening innovation and R&D capacity, improving labor market flexibility, and enhancing active labor market policies. Overall, the study presents a scenario in which Chile closes structural gaps with OECD’s 25th percentile over five years, with up to 6 percent higher output level and a cumulative net fiscal gain of about 1⁄2 percent of GDP.




Eight Years of Their Lives


Book Description

IDRC pub. Monograph on the educational system and access to education in Chile - presents the results of a longitudinal survey of access to primary education, secondary education and higher education, the transition from school to work, employment opportunities and occupational status achieved, to identify variables (personal characteristics, family and community social status, etc.) which influence equal opportunity. Bibliography pp. 173 to 177, graphs, photographs, questionnaire and statistical tables.