The Russian Labor Market : Moving from Crisis to Recovery
This report suggests measures to help Russia develop a formal, competitive labor market over the medium term. The study addresses four major questions: (1) How well has Russia been able to redress the misallocation of labor inherited from its socia...
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Moscow: Izdatelstvo Ves Mir and the World Bank
2013
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/01/5133139/russian-labor-market-moving-crisis-recovery http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15007 |
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okr-10986-150072021-04-23T14:03:12Z The Russian Labor Market : Moving from Crisis to Recovery World Bank AGGREGATE DEMAND BARRIERS TO ENTRY BASIC RIGHTS BUDGET CONSTRAINTS CHECKING COLLECTIVE BARGAINING CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT CPI DISCUSSIONS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC FACTORS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC RECOVERY ECONOMIC REFORM EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT CREATION EMPLOYMENT GROWTH EMPLOYMENT TRENDS ENTREPRENEURSHIP EXPENDITURES FORESTRY FREE TRADE HEALTH SERVICES HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT HOUSING INCENTIVE PROBLEMS INCOME INCOME INEQUALITY INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS INFLATION INSURANCE INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION JOB CREATION LABOR FORCE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION LABOR LAW LABOR MARKET LABOR MARKET POLICIES LABOR MARKET POLICY LABOR MARKETS LABOR MOBILITY LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LABOR RELATIONS LABOR RESOURCES LABOR STATISTICS LABOUR LAWS LAYOFF LAYOFFS LEGAL FRAMEWORK LEGISLATION LONG TERM UNEMPLOYMENT MARKET ECONOMIES MARKET ECONOMY MARKET LIBERALIZATION MARKET POWER MINIMUM WAGE OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY OCCUPATIONS PRODUCTIVE EMPLOYMENT PUBLIC DISCUSSION REAL WAGES REGIONAL UNEMPLOYMENT REGULATORY FRAMEWORK SAFETY SAFETY NET SAFETY NETS SAFETY STANDARDS SAVINGS SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SELF EMPLOYED SELF EMPLOYMENT SICK LEAVE SKILLED WORKERS SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIAL SAFETY NETS SUBSIDIARY TAX RATES TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE TRADE UNIONS TRADEOFFS TRANSITION ECONOMIES UNEMPLOYED UNEMPLOYMENT UNEMPLOYMENT LEVELS UNEMPLOYMENT RATE UNEMPLOYMENT RATES URBAN WORKERS WAGE FLEXIBILITY WAGES WORK FORCE WORKER PRODUCTIVITY This report suggests measures to help Russia develop a formal, competitive labor market over the medium term. The study addresses four major questions: (1) How well has Russia been able to redress the misallocation of labor inherited from its socialist past? (2) Do wages increasingly reflect market forces? (3) Are labor market institutions consistent with those required in a market economy? (4) How well has Russia been able to reduce explicit protection offered by firms and create an effective safety net? The report addresses each question in a separate chapter and also highlights key issues and policy options in each area. The development of a well functioning labor market will contribute to Russia's ability to integrate with the global economy, particularly as it faces the opportunity and challenges that will come with World Trade Organization accession. 2013-08-12T17:45:44Z 2013-08-12T17:45:44Z 2003 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/01/5133139/russian-labor-market-moving-crisis-recovery 5-7777-0274-0 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15007 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Moscow: Izdatelstvo Ves Mir and the World Bank Publications & Research :: Publication Publications & Research :: Publication Europe and Central Asia Russian Federation |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
AGGREGATE DEMAND BARRIERS TO ENTRY BASIC RIGHTS BUDGET CONSTRAINTS CHECKING COLLECTIVE BARGAINING CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT CPI DISCUSSIONS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC FACTORS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC RECOVERY ECONOMIC REFORM EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT CREATION EMPLOYMENT GROWTH EMPLOYMENT TRENDS ENTREPRENEURSHIP EXPENDITURES FORESTRY FREE TRADE HEALTH SERVICES HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT HOUSING INCENTIVE PROBLEMS INCOME INCOME INEQUALITY INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS INFLATION INSURANCE INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION JOB CREATION LABOR FORCE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION LABOR LAW LABOR MARKET LABOR MARKET POLICIES LABOR MARKET POLICY LABOR MARKETS LABOR MOBILITY LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LABOR RELATIONS LABOR RESOURCES LABOR STATISTICS LABOUR LAWS LAYOFF LAYOFFS LEGAL FRAMEWORK LEGISLATION LONG TERM UNEMPLOYMENT MARKET ECONOMIES MARKET ECONOMY MARKET LIBERALIZATION MARKET POWER MINIMUM WAGE OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY OCCUPATIONS PRODUCTIVE EMPLOYMENT PUBLIC DISCUSSION REAL WAGES REGIONAL UNEMPLOYMENT REGULATORY FRAMEWORK SAFETY SAFETY NET SAFETY NETS SAFETY STANDARDS SAVINGS SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SELF EMPLOYED SELF EMPLOYMENT SICK LEAVE SKILLED WORKERS SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIAL SAFETY NETS SUBSIDIARY TAX RATES TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE TRADE UNIONS TRADEOFFS TRANSITION ECONOMIES UNEMPLOYED UNEMPLOYMENT UNEMPLOYMENT LEVELS UNEMPLOYMENT RATE UNEMPLOYMENT RATES URBAN WORKERS WAGE FLEXIBILITY WAGES WORK FORCE WORKER PRODUCTIVITY |
spellingShingle |
AGGREGATE DEMAND BARRIERS TO ENTRY BASIC RIGHTS BUDGET CONSTRAINTS CHECKING COLLECTIVE BARGAINING CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT CPI DISCUSSIONS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC FACTORS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC RECOVERY ECONOMIC REFORM EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT CREATION EMPLOYMENT GROWTH EMPLOYMENT TRENDS ENTREPRENEURSHIP EXPENDITURES FORESTRY FREE TRADE HEALTH SERVICES HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT HOUSING INCENTIVE PROBLEMS INCOME INCOME INEQUALITY INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS INFLATION INSURANCE INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION JOB CREATION LABOR FORCE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION LABOR LAW LABOR MARKET LABOR MARKET POLICIES LABOR MARKET POLICY LABOR MARKETS LABOR MOBILITY LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LABOR RELATIONS LABOR RESOURCES LABOR STATISTICS LABOUR LAWS LAYOFF LAYOFFS LEGAL FRAMEWORK LEGISLATION LONG TERM UNEMPLOYMENT MARKET ECONOMIES MARKET ECONOMY MARKET LIBERALIZATION MARKET POWER MINIMUM WAGE OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY OCCUPATIONS PRODUCTIVE EMPLOYMENT PUBLIC DISCUSSION REAL WAGES REGIONAL UNEMPLOYMENT REGULATORY FRAMEWORK SAFETY SAFETY NET SAFETY NETS SAFETY STANDARDS SAVINGS SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SELF EMPLOYED SELF EMPLOYMENT SICK LEAVE SKILLED WORKERS SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIAL SAFETY NETS SUBSIDIARY TAX RATES TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE TRADE UNIONS TRADEOFFS TRANSITION ECONOMIES UNEMPLOYED UNEMPLOYMENT UNEMPLOYMENT LEVELS UNEMPLOYMENT RATE UNEMPLOYMENT RATES URBAN WORKERS WAGE FLEXIBILITY WAGES WORK FORCE WORKER PRODUCTIVITY World Bank The Russian Labor Market : Moving from Crisis to Recovery |
geographic_facet |
Europe and Central Asia Russian Federation |
description |
This report suggests measures to help
Russia develop a formal, competitive labor market over the
medium term. The study addresses four major questions: (1)
How well has Russia been able to redress the misallocation
of labor inherited from its socialist past? (2) Do wages
increasingly reflect market forces? (3) Are labor market
institutions consistent with those required in a market
economy? (4) How well has Russia been able to reduce
explicit protection offered by firms and create an effective
safety net? The report addresses each question in a separate
chapter and also highlights key issues and policy options in
each area. The development of a well functioning labor
market will contribute to Russia's ability to integrate
with the global economy, particularly as it faces the
opportunity and challenges that will come with World Trade
Organization accession. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Publication |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
The Russian Labor Market : Moving from Crisis to Recovery |
title_short |
The Russian Labor Market : Moving from Crisis to Recovery |
title_full |
The Russian Labor Market : Moving from Crisis to Recovery |
title_fullStr |
The Russian Labor Market : Moving from Crisis to Recovery |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Russian Labor Market : Moving from Crisis to Recovery |
title_sort |
russian labor market : moving from crisis to recovery |
publisher |
Moscow: Izdatelstvo Ves Mir and the World Bank |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/01/5133139/russian-labor-market-moving-crisis-recovery http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15007 |
_version_ |
1764426145078444032 |