scholarly journals Mortality in working-age population during the Great Recession and austerity in Spain

PLoS ONE ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (6) ◽  
pp. e0218410 ◽  
Author(s):  
Almudena Moreno-Lostao ◽  
Gregorio Barrio ◽  
Luis Sordo ◽  
Lucía Cea-Soriano ◽  
David Martínez ◽  
...  
2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel D. Towne ◽  
Janice C. Probst ◽  
James W. Hardin ◽  
Bethany A. Bell ◽  
Saundra Glover

2016 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 123-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yekaterina Chzhen

The 2008 financial crisis triggered the first contraction of the world economy in the post-war era. This article investigates the effect of the Great Recession on child poverty across the EU-27 plus Iceland, Norway and Switzerland and studies the extent to which social protection spending may have softened the negative impact of the economic crisis on children. While the risks of child poverty are substantially higher in countries with higher rates of working-age unemployment, suggesting a significant impact of the Great Recession on household incomes via the labour market, the study finds evidence for social protection spending cushioning the blow of the crisis at least to some extent. Children were significantly less likely to be poor in countries with higher levels of social protection spending in 2008–2013, even after controlling for the socio-demographic structure of the population, per capita gross domestic product (GDP) and the working-age unemployment rate. The poverty-dampening contextual effect of social spending was greater for the poverty risks of children in very low work intensity families and large families. The study uses two complementary thresholds of income poverty, both based on 60 percent of the national median: a relative poverty line and a threshold anchored in 2008. Although the choice of a poverty line makes a difference to aggregate child poverty rates, individual-level risks of a child being poor associated with a range of household-level characteristics are similar for the two poverty lines.


2020 ◽  
pp. 0143831X2093193
Author(s):  
Martina Bisello ◽  
Vincenzo Maccarrone ◽  
Enrique Fernández-Macías

This article investigates employment and occupational transitions that are behind structural changes in European labour markets before, during and after the Great Recession. The study introduces a new methodological approach for studying labour market flows considering the quality of the jobs from and into which the flows are taking place by differentiating them into wage quintiles. The analysis compares six European countries that are usually associated with different institutional clusters – France, Italy, Poland, Spain, Sweden and the UK. It tracks the transitions of their working age populations into and out of inactivity, unemployment and employment (in five wage categories). The findings show the extent to which employment and occupational mobility patterns differ across European countries, resulting in very different outcomes in terms of employment opportunities and life chances. Results also suggest that the countries studied fall into three distinct categories based on the degree of occupational mobility characterising their economies.


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