Displaying Publications 1 - 30 of 235 in total
Current search: 'Mark P. Taylor'
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The impact of local labour market conditions on school leaving decisions
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Educational aspirations and attitudes over the business cycle
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Employed and unemployed job seekers and the business cycle
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The lost generation?
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Gender differences in educational aspirations and attitudes
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The labour market impacts of leaving education when unemployment is high: evidence from Britain
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Gender differences in educational aspirations and attitudes
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Recession stalls social mobility for current generation
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Recession is stalling social mobility for a generation of teenagers, claims report
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Recession halting social mobility for teenagers, claims report
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The impact of the National Minimum Wage on employment retention, hours and job entry: a report to the Low Pay Commission
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Occupational change and mobility among employed and unemployed job seekers
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Employed and unemployed job seekers and the business cycle
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Differences in opportunities? Wage, employment and house-price effects on migration
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Who saves for retirement?
Mark L. Bryan, James Lloyd, Birgitta Rabe, et al.
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Bleak expectations. What are the economic effects of health-related job loss?
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Educational aspirations and attitudes over the business cycle
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Employment transitions over the business cycle
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Employment flows across the business cycle
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Can improving UK skills levels reduce poverty and income inequality by 2020?
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The economic impacts of leaving employment for health-related reasons
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Who saves for retirement?
Mark L. Bryan, Birgitta Rabe, James Lloyd, et al.
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Non-employment, age, and the economic cycle
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Who saves for retirement?
Mark L. Bryan, Birgitta Rabe, James Lloyd, et al.
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Young people face double jobs penalty
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Young people face double penalty in a slow job market
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Young face greater struggle to find work than older job seekers
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Employment transitions and the recession
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The impact of the National Minimum Wage on earnings, employment and hours through the recession: a report to the Low Pay Commission
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Leaving work for sickness could mean living in poverty within a year