ESF:MPV_PTPZ Labour Market and Employment - Course Information
MPV_PTPZ Labour Market and Employment Policy
Faculty of Economics and AdministrationSpring 2021
- Extent and Intensity
- 2/1/0. 5 credit(s). Type of Completion: zk (examination).
- Teacher(s)
- Mgr. Martin Guzi, Ph.D. (lecturer)
Dr. Magdalena Adamus (lecturer) - Guaranteed by
- Mgr. Martin Guzi, Ph.D.
Department of Public Economics – Faculty of Economics and Administration
Contact Person: Jana Biskupová
Supplier department: Department of Public Economics – Faculty of Economics and Administration - Timetable
- Tue 8:00–9:50 P304
- Timetable of Seminar Groups:
- Prerequisites
- The course assumes the basic knowledge of microeconomic concepts.
- Course Enrolment Limitations
- The course is also offered to the students of the fields other than those the course is directly associated with.
- fields of study / plans the course is directly associated with
- Public Economics and Administration (programme ESF, M-HPS)
- Public Economics and Administration (programme ESF, N-HPS)
- Public Economics and Administration (programme ESF, N-VES)
- Public Economics (programme ESF, N-HPS)
- Course objectives
- Classes have seminar format with a strong focus on class discussion and cooperative learning. Students taking this course will learn from real-life examples to understand the key employment policy challenges and the role of labour market institutions.
The following topics will be discussed: employment and wage determination, labour market flexibility, work-life balance, immigration, gender gaps, income adequacy, precarious work, incentive pay, labour market discrimination, unemployment, and institutions in the labour market. - Learning outcomes
- Students will learn to discuss, understand and tackle contemporary labour market problems and policy challenges. The course will put an emphasis on empirical research and encourage students to elaborate selective case studies into class presentations.
Knowledge, skills and competence you will learn:
• understand basic mechanisms of the labour market and the role of labour market institutions
• analyse policy questions related to labour markets
• read and understand project reports and policy publications
• use of the course content in your own academic work, for example in analyses that are part of the master’s thesis - Syllabus
- 1. Labour market characteristics
- • The purpose and meaning of employment, labour market during the economic crisis, non-standard work contracts, population at risk at the labour market.
- 2. Why gender matters in (labour) economics?
- • gender pay gap, global gender gap, Mathilda effect, sticky floor, glass ceiling, differences in gender concept between disciplines, historical and geographical changes of gender concept
- 3. Labour market discrimination
- • hiring discrimination, correspondence study, beauty discrimination, anonymous job applications, discrimination in online markets
- 4. Labour market segmentation and precarious work
- • Decent work, irregular working time, DDD jobs,zero-hour contracts.
- 5. Income adequacy, minimum wage and living wage
- • Employment effects of minimum wage, poverty trap, poverty persistence, living wage and the cost of living calculation, McWage Index, cross-country comparison of wage rates.
- 6. Unemployment and job search
- • job search and matching efficiency, job referrals, Beveridge curve, unemployment stigma, main strategies of unemployment elimination/reduction, regulation of the labour market, flexicurity, prison work.
- 8. Equal playing field - why genders differ?
- • division of labour in the family, (unpaid) household work, segregation (vertical and horizontal), discrimination theories
- 9. Labour market mobility and work migration
- • Job2job moves, work careers of university graduates, theory of migration, Roy selection, international labour migration.
- 10. Future of the labour market
- • Robotization and automatization, platform work, life-long education, adult skills.
- Literature
- Teaching methods
- The course includes lectures and seminar sessions. Classes have seminar format with a strong focus on class discussion and cooperative learning. We expect students to come to the classes. They are expected to participate in the class discussions and introduce the papers that they have read and also, their thoughts about them. If students miss classes not only will they not know the material, but they also deprive their classmates and lecturer of learning from them, and we lose the benefit of their contribution.
- Assessment methods
- Grading is based on participation in classroom through identified learning activities (20 points), class presentation (20 points), short paper writing (20 points), midterm exam (15 points) and final exam (25 points). Grading is based on the overall score: A 91-100 points, B 81 – 90 points, C 71 – 80 points, D 61 – 70 points, E 55 – 60 points, F less than 55 points
- Language of instruction
- Czech
- Further comments (probably available only in Czech)
- Study Materials
The course is taught annually.
Credit evaluation note: k = 1. - Teacher's information
- Language of instruction is Czech, and 30% classes are taught in English. Study materials are in both Czech and English. Students may choose to prepare their presentations and to write a term paper in Czech or in English. Midterm and final exams questions are formulated in English. Suggested online sources: • IZA World of Labor is an online platform that provides policy analysts, journalists, academics and society generally with relevant and concise information on labor market issues. • Our World in Data
- Enrolment Statistics (Spring 2021, recent)
- Permalink: https://is.muni.cz/course/econ/spring2021/MPV_PTPZ