Labour market and social policies to foster more inclusive growth in Sweden
Jamet, Stéphanie ; Chalaux, Thomas ; Koen, Vincent
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Paris
OECD Publishing - Paris
2013
51 p.
labour cost ; minimum wage ; social policy ; vocational training ; labour market policy ; gender equality
Economics Department Working Papers
1023
Labour market
http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/5k4c0vtwpttj-en
English
Bibliogr.
"Sweden is a very egalitarian country but inequalities have risen and some groups are poorly integrated into the labour market. For growth to become more inclusive, the gap between the cost of labour and productivity for some groups needs to be reduced, transitions from education to work should be facilitated, incentives to take a job ought to be strengthened and the non-employed need to be protected against the risk of falling into unemployment or inactivity traps. This calls for lowering minimum wages relative to the average wage for groups at risk of becoming unemployed, improving vocational education and training, and extending the coverage of the unemployment insurance while strengthening obligations for the unemployed. To address labour market duality risks, the gap in job protection between temporary and permanent contracts needs to be reduced. Women's employment is high but the gender wage gap could be narrowed further by enhancing their employment opportunities."
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