4 resultados para TRANSFERS
em RUN (Repositório da Universidade Nova de Lisboa) - FCT (Faculdade de Cienecias e Technologia), Universidade Nova de Lisboa (UNL), Portugal
Resumo:
Private financial transfers are becoming more and more important as ageing levels increase in Europe, with elders acting as both givers and receivers. Our study is divided in two main parts. In the first part we analyse the determinants of private financial transfers, using the Survey of Health, Ageing, and Retirement in Europe (SHARE). In the second part we analyse the importance of family values for these transfers, combining SHARE with European Values Study. We show that family functions as the main agent of private transfers. We conclude that family values drive financial transfers, mainly gifts provided by elderly individuals. We find that receipts by old-aged people are more related with need cases, such as illness and poorness; moreover, for these particular cases, family network plays a very important role, working as a safety net.
Resumo:
RESUMO - A morbilidade associada às lesões músculoesqueléticas ligadas ao trabalho (LMELT) origina uma elevada perda de produtividade (absentismo e presentismo) em organizações de saúde, o que induz um substantivo impacto (custo) económico. Nesse contexto, os profissionais de saúde, como grupo vulnerável à ocorrência de LMELT, nomeadamente aqueles que mobilizam os doentes diariamente, apresentam elevadas taxas de acidentes de trabalho com absentismo. Considerando a importância do capital humano em saúde e tendo em conta o contexto actual de contenção da despesa no sector da saúde português, o despiste de situações de perda de produtividade e seu impacto económico em instituições de saúde, assume um papel fundamental na gestão dessas organizações. O presente estudo teve como objetivo avaliar o impacto (custo) das LMELT por acidente de trabalho em enfermeiros e assistentes operacionais do CMRA durante o período de 2009 a 2013. Partindo da identificação dos acidentes de trabalho (AT) ocorridos nestes grupos profissionais entre 2009 e 2013, da lesão musculoesquelética resultante e do absentismo registado os participantes no estudo responderam aos itens da escala WQL-8 e SPS-6, para se determinar também os níveis de presentismo. Este estudo adotou a metodologia do capital humano para estimar os custos indiretos ou perda de produtividade das LMELT. Constatou-se que são as transferências a maior causa das LMELT, com uma sintomatologia mais prevalente na região lombar. Existe perda de produtividade nesta instituição entre 2009 e 2013 com um custo total estimado em 222.015,98€, absentismo e presentismo, sendo a Distração Evitada a dimensão que apresenta maiores valores.
Resumo:
This paper intends to study who pays for corruption in Brazil from 2005 to 2011. Politicians may decide to charge the spillovers of corruption at a municipal level through taxes or to charge it to the entire country through voluntary transfers. The used measure of corruption is based on audit reports conducted on randomly selected municipalities from 2005 to 2011.In order to address this question an IV strategy was computed using as instrument for the number of observed cases of corruption the dummy variable of being audited or not. We evaluated the impact of corruption on taxes and on voluntary transfers and concluded that with an increase in the number of observed cases of corruption the first decreases and the latest registers an increase. Therefore, considering all Brazilian municipalities, mayors prefer to spread the bill all over the country than charging it locally.
Resumo:
The suppression of internal border controls has led the European Union to establish a mechanism for determining the Member State responsible for examining each asylum application, with the main intention of deterring asylum seekers from lodging multiple applications and guaranteeing that it will be assessed by one of the States – the Dublin System. Even though it holds on a variety of criteria, the most commonly used is the country of first entrance in the EU. The growing migrating flows coming mainly from Northern Africa have thus resulted in an incommensurable burden over the border countries. Gradually, countries like Greece, Bulgaria and Italy have lost capability of providing adequate relief to all asylum seekers and the records of fundamental rights violations related to the provision of housing and basic needs or inhuman detention conditions started piling up. To prevent asylum seekers who had already displaced themselves to other Member States from being transferred back to countries where their human dignity is questionable, the European Court of Human Rights and the Court of Justice have developed a solid jurisprudence determining that when there is a risk of serious breach of fundamental rights all transfers to that country must halt, especially when it is identified with systemic deficiencies in the asylum system and procedures. This reflexion will go through the jurisprudence that influenced very recent legislative amendments, in order to identify which elements form part of the obligation not to transfer under the Dublin System. At last, we will critically analyze the new rising obligation, that has clearly proven insufficient in light of the international fundamental rights framework that the Member States and the EU are bound to respect, proposing substantial amendments with a view to reach a future marked by high solidarity and global responsibility from the European Union.