Includes bibliographical references (pages 151-159) and index.
Ninety thousand jobs destroyed every day -- Work cannot be parceled out -- Wages are not (always) the enemy of employment -- Work must pay -- The utility of employment -- Protecting employment -- Education is not a miracle cure -- Evaluating public policies on employment -- Waiting for the rain.
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"In The Natural Survival of Work, labor economists Pierre Cahuc and Andre Zylberberg consider how to manage the unemployment that results from the desirable churning of the economy, drawing on recent economic research and citing examples from France, the United States, the United Kingdom, and elsewhere."
"Unemployment in many continental European countries, particularly among youth, has reached high levels in recent years, and Cahuc and Zylberberg criticize labor market policies that are based on politics rather than economics. They discuss the minimum wage in both the United States and France and show that increasing it, under certain circumstances, can increase employment. They find fault with the idea that work sharing is a cure for unemployment. They consider how to design a system of unemployment insurance that does not destroy the incentive to find work, and examine the effect of government regulation of layoffs. Finally, they analyze the true impact of education and training as remedies for unemployment."--Jacket.