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Employment
(% change over previous year) |
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Unemployment rate (%) |
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Youth unemployment
rate (%) |
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Economic activity rate
(Women) |
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Economic
activity rate (Men) |
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Employment by major
economic sectors |
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Percentage of women
in the labour force |
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Labour force participation
Labour force activity rates increased in most western
European countries between 1995 and 2001. The most
notable exceptions are Malta and Turkey with a
considerable decrease in activity rates. The increase
has been mostly due to increasing participation
rates of women, while for men, in half of these
countries, the participation rates have even slightly
decreased. In most central and eastern European
countries the economic activity rates have decreased
both for men and women (the decrease being often
larger for men). In the CIS countries the changes
were more varied. In a majority of the UNECE countries
women constituted a larger proportion of the total
labour force in 2001 than in 1995 - between 40
and 50%. Two countries - Malta and Turkey - have
considerably less women in the labour force – fewer
than 30%.
Employment ratio
Total employment as a percentage of the total population
is an indicator of a country’s capacity to
support its population. Western European countries
like Iceland, Switzerland, Denmark, Norway and the
Netherlands have the highest employment/population
ratio in the UNECE region, whereas the lowest ratios
are in Bosnia and Herzegovina, The former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia, Serbia and Montenegro, and
Tajikistan (Figure 4.4). As the economic activity
rates for these countries are not considerably lower
than average, the reasons for the low ratio can be
high unemployment (as in Bosnia and Herzegovina,
and Serbia and Montenegro), but also the high proportion
of non-working age population and therefore a high
dependency ratio (as in Tajikistan).
Employment by economic sector
The general trend between 1995 and 2001 is a continuous
increase in the share of total employment in the
service sector at the expense of the agricultural
and industrial sectors. There are exceptions, and
the share of total employment in agriculture is still
high in many countries of central and eastern Europe
and the CIS, such as Albania (72%), Georgia (62%),
Kyrgyzstan (53%), Republic of Moldova (51%), Armenia
(44%) and Romania (43%).
Status in employment
Women are less likely than men to be employers or self-employed
workers. In no country does the proportion of women
among these groups reach 50 %, but it is over 40
% in the Republic of Moldova (48 %), Ukraine (48
%), Russian Federation (45 %) and Kyrgyzstan (42
%) (Figure 4.8). In all countries, except for Georgia
and Turkey, the majority of employed people work
as employees. In Georgia and Turkey, employees also
constitute the biggest group, but the share of self-employed
and family workers put together is even bigger.
Occupations
In the United States the proportion of women among
legislators, senior officials and managers is 54
%. In Lithuania the proportion women in these occupations
is also rather high at 47 %. In the rest of the UNECE
region there is clear majority of men among legislators,
senior officials and managers, with the lowest recorded
proportion of women being in Turkey at 8%.
Working hours and part-time employment
Part-time employment remains a female domain, but varies
considerably among countries. In Germany, Belgium
and Norway more than 30 % of all employed women work
part-time. In the Republic of Moldova the proportion
is less than 1 %. In most of the western countries,
the trend has been increasing since 1990. In northern
Europe and the United States, the share of women
working part-time has decreased but it still remains
quite high. Only in the United States is the proportion
of employed men working part-time over 10 %. In general,
employed persons in central and eastern Europe have
longer working hours than employed persons in western
Europe (except in Greece and Iceland). In all countries
men spend more time in paid work than women, but
the difference between women and men is more pronounced
in western Europe than in central and eastern Europe.
Iceland is the country with the highest rate of employed
persons with a second job.
Unemployment
A large majority of countries in western Europe and
North America had lower unemployment rates in 2001
than in 1995. In central and eastern Europe and the
CIS countries the picture is more varied, but the
majority of countries had higher unemployment rates
in 2001 than in 1995. In most countries there are
small differences between women and men in unemployment
rates. However, in Armenia, Greece, Italy and Spain,
considerably more women are unemployed than men.
In Lithuania the situation is the other way round – the
unemployment rate for men is 5.5 percentage points
higher than for women.
Youth unemployment
In a majority of UNECE countries there is a higher
youth unemployment rate for women than for men, but
in many countries the differences are not large and
may be subject to annual variations based on which
sectors of the economy are hardest hit by unemployment.
In 2001 the difference between youth unemployment
rates for women and for men were highest in Greece
and Spain, where the youth unemployment rates for
women were respectively 14.7 and 10.9 percentage
points higher than for men, and in Lithuania where
it was 11.3 percentage points higher for men than
for women. The youth unemployment rate is generally
higher than the overall unemployment rate throughout
the UNECE region.
Long-term unemployment
In some countries more than half of all the unemployed
have been so for more than 12 months. The recorded
long-term unemployment rate is highest in Albania
with 92 %, followed by Armenia (78 %), Slovenia (65
%), Italy (63 %) and Bulgaria (62 %).
Expenditure on labour market programmes
The expenditure on labour market programmes varies
substantially between countries from almost 5 per
cent of GDP in Denmark to less than 0.4 percent in
the United States. Furthermore, in most countries
unemployment compensation constitutes half or more
of the total labour market programme expenditure
(These data are available only for OECD member countries). |