Evidence-based policy making
IZA World of Labor is an online platform that provides policy analysts, journalists, academics and society generally with relevant and concise information on labor market issues. Based on the latest research, it provides current thinking on labor markets worldwide in a clear and accessible style. IZA World of Labor aims to support evidence-based policy making and increase awareness of labor market issues, including current concerns like the impact of Covid-19, and longer-term problems like inequality.
View our content on Covid-19—Pandemics and the labor market
Temperature, productivity and income
Rising temperatures due to climate change could dampen productivity growth for decades
气候变化是迅速恶化环境tal conditions through droughts and floods, hurricanes, wildfires, rising temperatures, and more frequent and longer heatwaves. A growing literature has shown how higher temperatures reduce worker productivity and economic output. These effects are more pronounced in poorer countries and in climate-exposed economic sectors like agriculture, construction, and manufacturing. The development of new technologies that mitigate exposure to heat among workers, combined with better temperature control in the workplace, will be essential to reduce the economic burden of climate change.
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How should job displacement wage losses be insured?Updated
Wage losses upon re-employment can seriously harm long-tenured displaced workers if they are not properly insured
Donald O. Parsons, July 2023Job displacement represents a serious earnings risk to long-tenured workers through lower re-employment wages, and these losses may persist for many years. Moreover, this risk is often poorly insured, although not for a lack of policy interest. To reduce this risk, most countries mandate scheduled wage insurance (severance pay), although it is provided only voluntarily in others, including the US. Actual-loss wage insurance is uncommon, although perceived difficulties may be overplayed. Both approaches offer the hope of greater consumption smoothing, with actual-loss plans carrying greater promise, but more uncertainty, of success.MoreLess -
Instruction time and educational outcomes
The quality of instruction and the activities it replaces determine the success of increased instruction time
Andrés Barrios Fernández, July 2023Increasing instruction time might seem a simple way to improve students' outcomes. However, there is substantial variation in its effects reported in the literature. When focusing on school day extensions, some studies find no effects, while others find that an additional hour of daily instruction significantly improves test scores. A similar pattern arises when examining the effect of additional days of class. These mixed findings likely reflect differences in the quality of instruction or in the activities that are being replaced by additional instruction. Hence these elements need to be considered when designing policies that increase instruction time.MoreLess -
How to support adult caregivers?
Caregiving for older adults is detrimental to caregivers’ well-being and requires policy interventions to support them
Joan Costa-Font, June 2023Some studies estimate that the value of time spent on unpaid caregiving is 2.7% of the GDP of the EU. Such a figure exceeds what EU countries spend on formal long-term care as a share of GDP (1.5%). Adult caregiving can exert significant harmful effects on the well-being of caregivers and can exacerbate the existing gender inequalities in employment. To overcome the detrimental cognitive costs of fulfilling the duty of care to older adults, focus should be placed on the development of support networks, providing caregiving subsidies, and enhancing labor market legislation that brings flexibility and level-up pay.MoreLess -
The widespread impacts of remittance flowsUpdated
Remittances have the potential to lift developing economies
Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes Susan Pozo, May 2023Remittances have risen spectacularly in absolute terms and in relation to traditional sources of foreign exchange, such as export revenues. Remittances can improve the well-being of family members left behind and boost growth rates of receiving economies. They can also create a culture of dependency, lowering labor force participation in recipient nations, promoting conspicuous consumption, and accelerating environmental degradation. A more thorough understanding of their impacts can help formulate policies that enable developing economies to harness the most out of these monetary inflows.MoreLess
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Jul 26, 2023
What we associate with first names and how it helps explain discrimination
Employers overestimate Black-White gap in productivity and discriminate, especially when making fast hiring decisions -
Jul 19, 2023
What does job applicants’ body art signal to employers?
New study directly measures the stigma surrounding job candidates with tattoos and piercings using real recruiters -
Jul 07, 2023
IZA 25th anniversary event in Berlin
Successful international research conference and policy panel on the German labor market
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Aug 29, 2023 - Aug 31, 2023
WHO Global Evidence-to-Policy (E2P) Summit 2023
Online
The Evidence-to-Policy (E2P) field is rapidly changing and evolving. Join us at the World Health Organization
(WHO) Global Evidence-to-Policy (E2P) Summit 2023 from 29-31 August 2023 to delve into the exciting
world of E2P, explore the latest developments and be part of shaping its future together. -
Sep 04, 2023 - Nov 06, 2023
IZA/FCDO ONLINE Development Economics Course for South Asia
Online
The biggest puzzle in economics is why fundamentally equal humans living in different countries enjoy very different standards of living. The aim of this course is to bring together the very latest research in development economics that tries to answer this puzzle.
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Sep 15, 2023 - Sep 16, 2023
Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Economy
Berlin, Germany
The conference covers a broad range of topics related to the economics of artificial intelligence. It will bring together recent contributions in this area of research, including both theoretical and empirical papers. Relevant subjects include, but are not limited to
IZA World of Labor panel discussion on health and the labor markets
IZA World of Labor discussion on the economics of sport
IZA World of Labor discussion on the economics of education
IZA World of Labor discussion on the economics of crime
IZA World of Labor discussion on higher education
IZA World of Labor discussion on the environment and the labor market
Why Degrowth won’t save the world
Exposure to war and its labor market consequences
Slow traffic, fast food: The effects of time lost on food store choice
Working from home during Covid and women’s job satisfaction
Do international tourist arrivals change residents’ attitudes toward immigration?
The child penalty for graduates
ChatGPT and IZA World of Labor
Does providing social services reduce the risk of repeated domestic abuse?
The direct and indirect effects of online job search advice