Have Permanent Layoff Rates Increased in Canada? - ARCHIVED
Articles and reports: 11F0019M2004218
Description:
This paper examines whether permanent layoff rates have increased in Canada between the 1980s and the 1990s, using data from the Longitudinal Worker File - a 10% random sample of all Canadian employees.
Issue Number: 2004218
Main Product: Analytical Studies Branch Research Paper Series
Format | Release date | More information |
---|---|---|
March 25, 2004 |
Related information
Related products
Analysis
- Articles and reports: Changing Trade Barriers and Canadian Firms: Survival and Exit After the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement
- Articles and reports: Corporate Financial Leverage in Canadian Manufacturing: Consequences for Employment and Inventories
- Articles and reports: Explaining the Deteriorating Entry Earnings of Canada's Immigrant Cohorts: 1966-2000
- Articles and reports: Factors Determining the Success or Failure of Canadian Establishments on Foreign Markets: A Survival Analysis Approach
- Articles and reports: How Long Do People Live in Low-income Neighbourhoods? Evidence for Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver
- Articles and reports: Public Transit Use Among Immigrants
- Articles and reports: Recent Immigration and the Formation of Visible Minority Neighbourhoods in Canada's Large Cities
- Articles and reports: Rising Income Inequality in the 1990s: An Exploration of Three Data Sources
- Articles and reports: The Retirement Plans and Expectations of Non-retired Canadians Aged 45 to 59
Subjects and keywords
Subjects
Keywords
- Date modified: