Individual employment, household employment and risk of poverty in the EU A decomposition analysis

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2017
Host editors
  • A.B. Atkinson
  • E. Marlier
  • A.C. Guio
Book title Monitoring Social Inclusion in Europe
ISBN
  • 9789279436246
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9789279436239
Series Statistical books. Population and social conditions
Edition 2017
Pages (from-to) 279-297
Publisher Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union
Organisations
  • Other - Executive Staff
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG)
Abstract
This chapter in ‘Monitoring Social Inclusion in Europe’ explores the missing links between employment policy success and inclusion policy failure. The focus is on individuals in the 20 to 59 age cohort and empirical analyses are relying on the EU Labour Force Survey (EU LFS) and the EU Survey on Income and Living Conditions (EU SILC). It updates and complements our earlier work and publications on household employment.
The analysis proceeds in two steps. The first step considers the distribution of individual jobs over households, thus establishing a link between individual employment rates and household employment rates. Following the work by Gregg, Scutella and Wadsworth (2008, 2010) a ‘polarization index’ is created to measure the size of unequal distribution of employment over households. Actual changes in household joblessness are decomposed in (i) changes due to changing individual employment rates and changing household structures and (ii) changes in the distribution of jobs over households.
The second step in the analysis matches employment at both levels of aggregation with poverty. Therefore, we decompose changes in the at-risk-of-poverty rates on the basis of (i) changes in the poverty risks of jobless households, and (ii) changes in the poverty risks of other (non-jobless) households; (iii) changes in household joblessness due to changes in individual employment rates and changing household structures and (iv) changes in the distribution of employment. The proposed technique does yield interesting insights into the trajectories that individual EU welfare states have followed over the past ten years.
The book is available at the Eurostat website, but it can also been completely downloaded here.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.2785/6030
Downloads
Individual employment_Corluy (Final published version)
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