874 resultados para wage labour
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This article presents three stylized facts that characterized the evolution of labour markets in Latin America and the Caribbean in the period 2003-2012 and represented breaks from previous trends. It is argued that these changes have to do with the economic and production context and the political and institutional framework. We show how the magnitude and patterns of economic growth impact on the nature of job creation, especially on shifts within and between economic sectors and the various segments of different productivity levels. We emphasize how changes in labour institutions have contributed to the evolution of labour indicators and, lastly, look at recent advances and persistent weaknesses in labour performance, as well as a number of risks to the continuity of recent favourable labour trends.
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Development then and now: Idea and utopia / Rolando Cordera Campos .-- Latin America’s competitive position in knowledge-intensive services trade / Andrés López, Andrés Niembro and Daniela Ramos .-- Wage share and economic growth in Latin America, 1950-2011 / Germán Alarco Tosoni .-- Patterns of technical progress in the Brazilian economy, 1952-2008 / Adalmir Marquetti and Melody de Campos Soares Porsse .-- Mexico: Combining monthly inflation predictions from surveys / Pilar Poncela, Víctor M. Guerrero, Alejandro Islas, Julio Rodríguez and Rocío Sánchez-Mangas .-- Expectations and industrial output in Uruguay: Sectoral interdependence and common trends / Bibiana Lanzilotta .-- Argentina: Impacts of the child allowance programme on the labour-market behaviour of adults / Roxana Maurizio and Gustavo Vázquez .-- Occupational mobility and income differentials: The experience of Brazil between 2002 and 2010 / Sandro Eduardo Monsueto, Julimar da Silva Bichara and André Moreira Cunha .-- What does the National High School Exam (enem) tell Brazilian society? / Rodrigo Travitzki, Jorge Calero and Carlota Boto .-- Brazil’s Northeast Financing Constitutional Fund: Differentiated effects on municipal economic growth / Fabrício Carneiro Linhares, Ricardo Brito Soares, Marcos Falcão Gonçalves and Luiz Fernando Gonçalves Viana.
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The Employment Situation in Latin America and the Caribbean is a twice-yearly report prepared jointly by the Economic Development Division of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) and the Office for the Southern Cone of Latin America of the International Labour Organization (ILO).
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This paper addresses how and why domestic workers in Jamaica are disenfranchised, with particular emphasis on the law’s inability to combat their exploitation in the labour force. My starting point is an online newspaper article entitled “Coping as a Domestic Helper”, which was based on a study investigating the living standard and coping strategies of minimum wage earners. In Jamaica domestic workers fall into three main categories - the residential worker, the non-residential weekly worker and the daily worker. Domestic workers are undervalued and their plight is especially grievous because they are characterized by a number of features that combine to have an exponentially negative effect on their social worth.
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This article analyses the trend of unfair inequality in Brazil (1995-2009) using a nonparametric approach to estimate the income function. The entropy metrics introduced by Li, Maasoumi and Racine (2009) are used to quantify income differences separately for each effort variable. A Gini coefficient of unfair inequality is calculated, based on the fitted values of the non-parametric estimation; and the robustness of the estimations, including circumstantial variables, is analysed. The trend of the entropies demonstrated a reduction in the income differential caused by education. The variables “hours worked” and “labour-market status” contribute significantly to explaining wage differences imputed to individual effort; but the migratory variable had little explanatory power. Lastly, the robustness analysis demonstrated the plausibility of the results obtained at each stage of the empirical work.
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The document evaluates the presence of segmentation in the Argentinean labour market. The analysis is centred on the comparison of the earnings of formal and informal workers. Two different approaches to the definition of informality are used. The existence of a formal premium is tested using dynamic data and semiparametric techniques. The period analysed is 1996-2006 for all urban surveyed areas. Our results support the segmentation hypothesis for the Argentine urban labour market: workers with similar probabilities of entering/exiting across sectors obtain different earnings.
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Este trabalho discute a importância da "produção invisível" na composição da renda total dos agricultores familiares de uma reigião de fronteira da Amazônia, como é o caso do sudeste paraense que é fortemente marcado pelos conflitos agrários. os dados utilizados neste estudo foram obtidos a partir de uma pesquisa de campo realizada junto a 78 agricultores familiares do Projeto de Assentamento Agroextrativista Praialta e Piranheira, Município de Nova Ipixuna, Pará, em 2001. O objetivo geral deste trabalho foi conhecer de que forma a "produção invisível" contribui para composição da renda familiar e da estratégia de reprodução da agricultura familiar na mesorregião do sudeste paraense. A escolha dos produtores entrevistados foi intencional, que se constitui na identificação da renda agrícola, bem como na caracterização dos sistemas de produção desenvolvidos por estes agricultores. Este procedimento permitiu a elaboração de uma tipologia dos sistemas de produção a partir de alguns indicadores socioeconômicos e agronômicos. Os resultados desta pesquisa desta pesquisa comprovam a forte participação da "produção invisível" no conjunto das atividades da agricultura familiar. Produtos com mercado definido, têm uma parte da produção retida para consumo familiar, dos produtos sem mercado voltados exclusivamente para o autoconsumo e, uma componente importante, refer-se à venda da mão-de-obra familiar, essencial na sua estratégia de sobrevivência. Uma conclusão imediata é que a produção agrícola e extrativa é muito superior àquela que vem sendo estimada ou desconhecida nas estatística oficiais. O conhecimento da participação da "produção invisível" torna-se importante no delineamento de políticas públicas, primeiro pela subestimação dos dados estatísticos oficiais, tanto pela quantidade como pela não-inclusão de diversos produtos, tanto produzidos ou coletados, pela agricultura familiar, na propriedade ou fora dela. Desta forma, pode-se verificar que os agricultores familiares do Projeto de Assentamento Agroextrativista Praialta e Piranheira possuem uma renda total equivalente a 1,48 salário mínimo/mês. É interessante destacar que a contribução da "produção invisível" na renda familiar chega a 0,28 salário mínimo/mês que representa 18,77 % total da renda invisível. A drenagem da renda não-agrícola autônoma, decorente da aposentadoria do INSS, representa 10,55 % da renda monetária dos agricultores, constituindo em importante fator de sustentabilidade das comunidades locais. Espera-se que estes resultados sejam importantes para aumentar a sustentabilidade da agricultura familiar de fronteira estimadas em mais de 600 mil unidades familiares na Amazônia, responsáveis pela maior parcela das derrubadas e queimadas crônicas.
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Teoricamente, este artigo foi elaborado do ponto de vista do FEMINISMO, compreendido este enquanto uma nova perspectiva científico-politica. Por conseguinte, rejeita-se a posição do denominado feminismo radical, segundo a qual as relações de gênero constituem o principio fundamental estruturador das sociedades capitalistas, assim como se refuta a posição daqueles que reduzem a textura complexa das sociedades de classes a lutas de classe. O feminismo como perspectiva cientificopolítica não apenas leva em consideração estes dois antagonismos, como também suas interrelações. Daí deriva a concepção deste tipo de sociedade em termos de capitalismo-patriarcado e não como capitalismo patriarcal. À luz deste esquema teórico de referência é examinada, ao longo da história, a desigual incorporação da mulher na força de trabalho brasileira. Se durante o período 1872-1982 os dados a respeito deste fenômeno sofreram mudanças, houve, por outro lado, muita conservação de fenômenos discriminatórios contra a mulher, no interior das estatísticas. Ou seja, o grosso das trabalhadoras continua ocupando posições subalternas, recebendo salários mais baixos pelo desempenho da mesma função, exercendo duas jornadas de trabalho. Estes fenômenos como também os que deles decorrem, só poderão ser eliminados pela luta contra o patriarcado-capitalismo, pela destruição desta simbiose, que propicia a dominaçâo-exploração de quase todos por muitos e de mulheres por homens.
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This article argues that the precarisation of employment that has taken place in Brazil since the 1990s has been fundamentally different in kind from earlier forms of precariousness, which took place outside the formal economy. The new forms of precariousness are taking place within the sphere of the economy controlled by transnational corporations. Although they have only reached critical mass during the 2000s, the ground was prepared by ‘post neoliberal’ restructuring, including labour law reforms, that took place in Brazil during the 1990s and introduced new forms of flexible working. The article argues that the new condition of labour now emerging in Brazil, which is a structural feature of labour under global capitalism, is characterised by psychosocial dynamics that cause: first, class desubjectivation; second, a ‘seizure’ of the waged worker's subjectivity; and third, the reduction of living labour to the status of a workforce treated as goods. Comprehending these changes necessitates a related change in the theoretical and methodological framework in which the precariousness of work is studied, one that incorporates within its scope the issues of workers' health and the quality of working life.
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An outcome of economic growth is increased employment, but this should not be the only measure to assess a country's labour market, it is also important to verify whether the jobs created are considered good jobs. Thus, this study analyses the Brazilian labour market from 2000 to 2009, in terms of the quantity and quality of jobs generated in this period. To this end, a descriptive analysis was performed, in addition to an evaluation using econometrics and the data envelopment analysis (DEA) technique. The results of the research indicated that the Brazilian labour market is growing in terms of its quality.
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The aim of this study was to assess the dentistry profile, based on social and demographic data, post-graduation formation, and to verify the insertion of dental graduates in the labour force. The participants were professionals graduated from a Brazilian Public Dental School, between 2000 and 2010. An instrument was sent by mail and/or e-mail to them. It was used Kruskal Wallis Test. Among 1047 questionnaires, 189 returned and 65.6% were answered by female. In relation to post-graduation course, 57.7% of professionals performed it, however 56.9% not attended only in their area; 66.6% of professionals are concentrated in cities larger than 100 thousand habitants. There was association between income and gender, and others. The predominant work modality was self-employed. Among the total, 36.5% want to work part-time in dentistry. The female gender was predominant and there was wage discrepancy between genders. The professionals have been concentrated in largest cities.
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This article investigates the effect of product market liberalisation on employment allowing for interactions between policies and institutions in product and labour markets. Using panel data for OECD countries over the period 19802002, we present evidence that product market deregulation is more effective at the margin when labour market regulation is high. The data also suggest that product market liberalisation may promote employment-enhancing labour market reforms.
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This paper uses administrative data to follow Brazilian workers over time and examine what happens to the inter-regional wage differentials after controlling for unmeasured workers' characteristics that are fixed over time. Since the data allow us to track the same workers over the years, we are in the unusual position of obtaining the individual wages before and after the migration process. As a significant share of workers changed States in the sample period, it is possible to examine to what extent the wage differentials reflect the concentration of high-skilled individuals in some States. The results show that the overall wage variability across States drops to almost one third of its original value and the ranking of the State effects is significantly altered after we take into account the workers' fixed effects. A great deal of the inter-regional differentials, therefore, reflects differences in the average ability of workers across States.
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Background: Caesarean section rates in Brazil have been steadily increasing. In 2009, for the first time, the number of children born by this type of procedure was greater than the number of vaginal births. Caesarean section is associated with a series of adverse effects on the women and newborn, and recent evidence suggests that the increasing rates of prematurity and low birth weight in Brazil are associated to the increasing rates of Caesarean section and labour induction. Methods: Nationwide hospital-based cohort study of postnatal women and their offspring with follow-up at 45 to 60 days after birth. The sample was stratified by geographic macro-region, type of the municipality and by type of hospital governance. The number of postnatal women sampled was 23,940, distributed in 191 municipalities throughout Brazil. Two electronic questionnaires were applied to the postnatal women, one baseline face-to-face and one follow-up telephone interview. Two other questionnaires were filled with information on patients' medical records and to assess hospital facilities. The primary outcome was the percentage of Caesarean sections (total, elective and according to Robson's groups). Secondary outcomes were: post-partum pain; breastfeeding initiation; severe/near miss maternal morbidity; reasons for maternal mortality; prematurity; low birth weight; use of oxygen use after birth and mechanical ventilation; admission to neonatal ICU; stillbirths; neonatal mortality; readmission in hospital; use of surfactant; asphyxia; severe/near miss neonatal morbidity. The association between variables were investigated using bivariate, stratified and multivariate model analyses. Statistical tests were applied according to data distribution and homogeneity of variances of groups to be compared. All analyses were taken into consideration for the complex sample design. Discussion: This study, for the first time, depicts a national panorama of labour and birth outcomes in Brazil. Regardless of the socioeconomic level, demand for Caesarean section appears to be based on the belief that the quality of obstetric care is closely associated to the technology used in labour and birth. Within this context, it was justified to conduct a nationwide study to understand the reasons that lead pregnant women to submit to Caesarean sections and to verify any association between this type of birth and it's consequences on postnatal health.