Key labor market indicators : analysis with household survey data
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Key labor market indicators : analysis with household survey data
(Streamlined analysis with ADePT software)
World Bank Group , International Labour Organization, c2016
Available at / 8 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Other authors: Steven Kapsos, Evangelia Bourmpoula, Zurab Sajaia, Michael Lokshin
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Key Labor Market Indicators: Analysis with Household Survey Data is an introduction to labour market indicator analysis and a guide for analysing household survey data using the ADePT ILO (International Labour Organization) Labor Market Indicators Module. The analytical framework and approach taken up in this book are based on the ILO's Key Indicators of the Labour Market (KILM). KILM indicators provide a strong basis on which to address key questions related to productive employment and decent work. The ADePT ILO Labor Market Indicators Module is a powerful tool for producing and analysing KILM indicators using household survey data. The software allows researchers and practitioners to automate data production, to minimize data production errors, and to quickly produce a wide range of labour market data from labour force surveys or other household surveys that contain labour market information. ABOUT ADePT Streamlined Analysis with ADePT Software is a series that provides academics, students, and policy practitioners with a theoretical foundation, practical guidelines, and software tools for applied analysis in various areas of economic research. ADePT Platform is a software package developed in the research department of the World Bank (see www.worldbank.org/adept). The series examines such topics as sector performance and inequality in education, the effectiveness of social transfers, labor market conditions, the effects of macroeconomic shocks on income distribution and labor market outcomes, child anthropometrics, and gender inequalities.
by "Nielsen BookData"