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Covering employment and wage gender gaps, participation of women,
fertility, and the welfare of children, this insightful volume
discusses how the trend towards greater participation of women in
labour markets interacts with gender differences in pay. It
focusses on the scope for increasing the number of women in the
labour force without negatively affecting the development of their
children. The need for this volume has become self evident. At the
Spring 2000 Lisbon meeting of the European Council the Heads of
Governments of the EU agreed to accelerate the greater
participation of women in the labour market. However, neither in
Lisbon nor in the subsequent Spring European Councils of the EU was
it discussed how to achieve this target - and the trade-offs that
would be involved in increasing the participation of women in paid
employment. Policies for increasing participation must involve some
losers, or they would already have been implemented everywhere. If
distributional considerations and policy trade-offs are ignored, it
is only possible to set virtual targets, neglecting the reforms
needed to achieve them. This book sets out a better informed policy
debate about these issues, paving the way to more realistic targets
and ways to achieve them.
What does ‘development’ mean? How does ‘progress’ happen?
What drives civilisational change, from the first urban settlements
in Mesopotamia to the creation of the first green smart cities?
From the first agricultural exploitations to the knowledge economy?
How did we, as a human community, build the world as we know it and
what will define the next steps of our journey on earth? Asking
fundamental questions has long been out of fashion for individuals
in general, let alone for policymakers. But, fundamental ‘why’
questions play with the boundaries and define them. Crises offer a
window of opportunity, a small time-bubble during which people are
collectively drawn to understanding what went wrong, asking what is
it that brought us here. If there ever was a time to initiate this
long overdue process of asking and reflecting on the questions that
matter, today, in the middle of an unprecedented crisis, is it. We
call for the adoption of a citizen-centric networked approach to
development that meaningfully incorporates individual needs and
wellbeing while shifting the focus away from economic growth as the
only relevant parameter.
Covering employment and wage gender gaps, participation of women,
fertility, and the welfare of children, this insightful volume
discusses how the trend towards greater participation of women in
labour markets interacts with gender differences in pay. It
focusses on the scope for increasing the number of women in the
labour force without negatively affecting the development of their
children. The need for this volume has become self evident. At the
Spring 2000 Lisbon meeting of the European Council the Heads of
Governments of the EU agreed to accelerate the greater
participation of women in the labour market. However, neither in
Lisbon nor in the subsequent Spring European Councils of the EU was
it discussed how to achieve this target - and the trade-offs that
would be involved in increasing the participation of women in paid
employment. Policies for increasing participation must involve some
losers, or they would already have been implemented everywhere.
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