Ageing and the Transition to Retirement - A Comparative Analysis of European Welfare States (Hardcover, New edition)

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It is clear that there are two conflicting trends in Europe. Firstly, a demographic shift towards population ageing and secondly, a massive decrease in the labour force participation of older workers (aged 50 years and over). Both trends have re-enforced two socio-economic concerns of most European welfare states. These are the increasing costs for welfare states to finance pathways from employment to official retirement, and the threat of labour market shortages in the near future as a result of both the ageing process and the early exit of older workers. European countries. After years of excluding older workers from the labour market, we can now observe a trend in many countries to re-integrate them again. The combination of two trends, an ageing society and the massive early exit from the labour market of past decades, have also resulted in re-definitions of the social meaning of ageing, older workers, the transition from work to retirement and - on a more general level - the meaning of social citizenship. ways the end of the working life is organized under different welfare state arrangements in ten EU countries plus Hungary, Slovakia and Norway. The authors consider: how changes in work and the life-course affect the relationship between ageing and work; which pathways out of the working life are available and what programmes or initiatives have been developed to change early exit into late exit or to re-integrate older workers in the labour market; and what the individual perspective on the relation between ageing and work is and how different institutions design the life course.

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Product Description

It is clear that there are two conflicting trends in Europe. Firstly, a demographic shift towards population ageing and secondly, a massive decrease in the labour force participation of older workers (aged 50 years and over). Both trends have re-enforced two socio-economic concerns of most European welfare states. These are the increasing costs for welfare states to finance pathways from employment to official retirement, and the threat of labour market shortages in the near future as a result of both the ageing process and the early exit of older workers. European countries. After years of excluding older workers from the labour market, we can now observe a trend in many countries to re-integrate them again. The combination of two trends, an ageing society and the massive early exit from the labour market of past decades, have also resulted in re-definitions of the social meaning of ageing, older workers, the transition from work to retirement and - on a more general level - the meaning of social citizenship. ways the end of the working life is organized under different welfare state arrangements in ten EU countries plus Hungary, Slovakia and Norway. The authors consider: how changes in work and the life-course affect the relationship between ageing and work; which pathways out of the working life are available and what programmes or initiatives have been developed to change early exit into late exit or to re-integrate older workers in the labour market; and what the individual perspective on the relation between ageing and work is and how different institutions design the life course.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Ashgate Publishing Limited

Country of origin

United Kingdom

Series

New Perspectives on Ageing and Later Life

Release date

March 2004

Availability

Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days

First published

2004

Editors

Authors

,

Dimensions

234 x 156 x 22mm (L x W x T)

Format

Hardcover

Pages

310

Edition

New edition

ISBN-13

978-0-7546-0922-3

Barcode

9780754609223

Categories

LSN

0-7546-0922-7



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