英国的贫困与无业问题

Poverty and Worklessness in Britain

Economic Journal · 2004
被引 4
人大 AABS 4

中文导读

分析英国自1979年以来相对贫困大幅上升的原因,主要是无业增加、收入差距扩大和福利指数化问题,并讨论通过教育、工资下限和税收抵免等政策降低贫困的可能性。

Abstract

Relative poverty in the UK has risen massively since 1979 mainly because of increasing worklessness, rising earnings dispersion and benefits indexed to prices, not wages. So poverty is now at a very high level. The economic forces underlying this are the significant shift in demand against the unskilled which has outpaced the shift in relative supply in the same direction. This has substantially weakened the low-skill labour market which has increased both pay dispersion and worklessness, particularly among low-skilled men. The whole situation has been exacerbated by the very long tail in the skill distribution, so that over 20 per cent of the working age population have very low skills indeed (close to illiterate). Practical policies discussed include improving education and overall well-being for children in the lower part of the ability range, raising wage floors, New Deal policies, tax credits and benefits for the workless. Overall, I would argue that without reducing the long tail in the skill distribution, there is no practical possibility of policy reducing relative poverty to 1979 levels.

英国贫困无业问题低技能劳动力市场技能分布长尾