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'Right and Duty' Principle in the Danish Model
This principle is a foundational element of the Danish 'flexicurity' model, establishing a reciprocal agreement for unemployed individuals. It grants workers the right to receive financial support from the welfare system after losing a job, while simultaneously imposing a duty on them to actively participate in measures aimed at re-employment, such as job searching or retraining.
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Economics
Economy
Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.2 Unemployment, wages, and inequality: Supply-side policies and institutions - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
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The Danish Model's Effective Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic
Poul Nyrup Rasmussen
Active Labour Market Policies in the Danish Flexicurity Model
'Right and Duty' Principle in the Danish Model
The Danish Flexicurity Triangle
Collective Bargaining in the Danish Model
A government aims to design a labor market that simultaneously promotes economic dynamism by allowing firms to easily adjust their workforce in response to market shifts, while also protecting individuals from the negative consequences of job loss. Which combination of policies would best achieve this dual objective?
Labor Market Policy Reform Analysis
In a labor market system characterized by easy hiring/firing for employers, generous unemployment benefits, and active re-training programs, the primary source of security for a worker comes from the legal protection against being laid off.
A policymaker is studying a labor market model that successfully combines high levels of employer flexibility (easy hiring and firing) with low long-term unemployment. They observe that the model includes generous unemployment benefits and robust job retraining programs. Which of the following additional elements is most crucial for preventing the generous benefits from creating a disincentive to work and ensuring the model's overall success?
A government implements a major labor market reform focused solely on increasing flexibility for employers, making it significantly easier to hire and dismiss workers. The reform does not include changes to the country's modest unemployment benefits or its limited job retraining programs. Based on the principles of a system that successfully balances flexibility with security, what is the most probable consequence of this isolated policy change?
Match each component of a labor market model that blends flexibility and security with its corresponding description.
The Paradox of Labor Market Flexibility and Security
Labor Market Reform in 'Stagnatia'
Assessing the Transferability of a Labor Market Model
A country with a long history of adversarial relationships between labor unions and employer associations wants to reform its labor market. The proposed reform aims to increase employers' ability to hire and fire workers easily, while simultaneously providing a strong social safety net and extensive job retraining programs for the unemployed. Which of the following presents the most fundamental obstacle to the successful implementation and long-term stability of this new system?
Income Security via Social Safety Nets in the Danish Flexicurity Model
Job Security vs. Employment Security in the Danish Model
Economic Efficiency as an Outcome of the Danish Flexicurity Model
WS-PS Model Analysis of the Danish Flexicurity Model
Learn After
Reciprocal Obligations in the Labor Market
Labor Market Obligations Scenario
Which statement best analyzes the functional relationship between the 'right' to unemployment support and the 'duty' to seek re-employment in a labor market system structured around this principle?
Evaluating Labor Market Policy Imbalances
A key characteristic of a labor market system built on the 'right and duty' principle is that an individual's entitlement to unemployment benefits is independent of their active participation in job-seeking activities.
In a labor market system where unemployed individuals have a right to generous support but also a duty to actively seek new work, what is the most likely economic consequence if the 'duty' component is not effectively enforced?
A country's labor market policy is built on a principle of reciprocal obligations. Match each conceptual part of this policy with its corresponding description.
Evaluating a Proposed Labor Market Reform
Analyzing Economic Incentives in Unemployment Systems
Designing a Labor Market Activation Program