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- W2511676503 abstract "Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Acknowledgements Thanks go to many people in preparing this special issue. The authors not only enthusiastically contributed but also inspired each other. Freek Schiphorst, Mansoob Murshed and Louk de la Rive Box ably chaired seminar sessions and together with Irene van Staveren, Peter Knorringa, Michael Grimm and Karel Jansen provided useful comments, as did at a later stage Sakiko Fukada‐Parr, Kay Grigar, Dharam Ghai, and Stephan Klasen. Notes 1 Seminar on Work, Employment and Globalization, Institute of Social Studies (ISS), The Hague, 18 September 2008. 2 There are of course exceptions; individuals and some international agencies have been making proposals for giving greater attention to employment policies (see, for example, World Commission on the Social Dimension of Globalization, Citation2004; Pollin et al Citation2006; Pollin and Heintz, Citation2007; Novick et al., Citation2007). 3 Part of growing inequality can be explained by the policies undertaken during the process of liberalization and adjustment, including policies to make the labour market more efficient (van der Hoeven and Taylor, Citation2000). 4 ‘… over the past 30 years particularly, there has been an increase in inequality. In effect, we have been transferring money from the poor to the rich, from people who would spend the money to people who do not need to spend the money, and the result of that is weaker aggregate demand. The United States thought it could solve the problem: Americans who had no money were told to keep spending as if they had it. They enjoyed it for awhile. A massive debt finance bubble enabled them to continue to spend’ (Stiglitz, Citation2009, pp. 7–8). 5 In a study of the manufacturing sector in a large sample of developing countries, Amsden and van der Hoeven (Citation1996) argue that a decline in real wages and a fall in the wage share of value added in most non‐Asian developing countries in the 1980s and the 1990s reflect a redistribution of income from labour to capital, as low wages were made to bear the burden of uncompetitive manufacturers. 6 See discussion in World Commission on the Social Dimension of Globalization (Citation2004)." @default.
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- W2511676503 date "2010-02-01" @default.
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- W2511676503 title "Employment, Inequality and Globalization: A Continuous Concern" @default.
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