Not exact matches
«The difference stems primarily from
demographic trends that have significantly reduce the growth
of the
labor force.
LaVorgna and his colleagues came up with a hypothetical model
of labor force participation to capture
demographic vs. non-
demographic factors.
Potential economic growth is going to slow dramatically over the coming years because
of slowing growth in the
labor force, due to growing
demographic trends, and continued poor productivity performance.
Economic expansion in this core was associated with two other dominant trends: growth in population (the so - called
demographic transition, which both facilitated, and was facilitated by, industrialization) and the geographic inclusion
of previously isolated, local, and ethnic sectors
of the population into the commercial and industrial
labor force.
Over the next 15 — 20 years, Japan must tackle key economic, human power, and
demographic issues such as a declining birth rate, an aging population, and the challenge
of sustaining a sufficiently skilled
labor force.
Tectonic social changes — including
demographic shifts that have placed most women with school - age children in the
labor force, research breakthroughs in the learning sciences and in socio - emotional and brain development, and daunting national achievement worries — have all converged to place a major new emphasis on the quality
of a child's learning experiences throughout the typical school day, after school, weekends, and across the year, including summers.
It examines
forced as well as voluntary migrations and places these movements within their historical context, including ethnic cleansing, population exchanges, and
demographic engineering in the service
of nation - building as well as more recent
labor migration due to globalization.Inside, readers will find the work
of international experts that cuts across national and disciplinary lines.
Our findings suggest that despite cross-national variation in distributions
of demographic and socio - economic characteristics,
labor force participation
of women
of different ages, as well as formal childcare usage, are key explanatory factors for national variations in intensive grandparental childcare.