【第26屆太平洋經濟共同體研討會 ─結構性失業
(Examining the Mid- and Long-Term Structural Unemployment in Asia-Pacific) 】
線上報名
※活動時間 (Date):
2011年10月13日至10月14日(週四至週五)
Thursday and Friday, October 13th-14th, 2011
※活動地點 (Venue):
華國飯店12樓(臺北市中山區林森北路600號12樓)
Imperial Hotel Taipei 12F, No. 600 Lin Shen North Road Taipei
※主辦單位:財團法人太平洋經濟合作理事會中華民國委員會 (Chinese Taipei Pacific Economic Cooperation Committee)
※報名費用:免費
※報名截止日期:公告起至額滿為止
※報名方式:台經院活動網站線上報名
※洽詢專線:(02)2586-5000分機507 陳小姐、分機529 林小姐
※本場次提供公務人員終身學習認證時數。
※活動簡介 (Introduction):
The global financial crisis spanned from 2008 to 2009 had serious impacts not only on economic development but also on labour markets of the Asia-Pacific region. Unemployment became one major economic issue during the financial crisis and its impacts remain in the post-crisis era. The global GDP growth dropped tremendously in 2008, went down further in the first quarter of 2009, and started to recover since the second half of 2009. However, some global forecasts warn that unemployment rates in most economies will remain high and have great influence on economic security even after the economy started recovering. Therefore, to accelerate the sluggish recovery of job markets is essential for making healthy economic revival as well as maintaining social stability today.
Unemployment as a lagging economic indicator is outperformed by leading indicators in most Asia-Pacific economies, and has become a problem facing many decision makers in the region. In economic theory, unemployment can be classified into frictional, cyclical, structural, and classical types. The natural rate of unemployment is considered as sum of rates of frictional, structural, and classical unemployment. The cyclical unemployment rate is supposed to be zero when the economy is in full recovery or in a boom. However, in many Asia-Pacific economies, current unemployment rates are still much higher than the pre-crisis level despite a strong GDP upturn, which implies that the unemployment problem is no longer cyclical but structure-related.
Unemployment is not only a critical economic phenomenon but also an extremely urgent issue in social safety nets policy making. Firstly, increasing unemployment, according to Okun’s Law, may result in declining production. Secondly, high unemployment means fewer job opportunities, less income, lower consumption, and worse living conditions. Thirdly, structural unemployed labourers are more difficult to be absorbed in existing labour markets, and this long-term unemployment trend may form a vicious circle where social problems further undermine economic dynamics. That is, poverty, uneven income distribution, family dissolution, high suicide and crime rate could add to fiscal burden of social welfare expenditure and meanwhile hamper economic development.
Furthermore, in the Asia Pacific region, structural unemployment is an evident phenomenon undermining socioeconomic inclusiveness considering that structural unemployment has greater impacts on vulnerable groups, such as women and unskilled workers. High structural unemployment implies that economic growth in the post-crisis era is constrained in promoting quality of living, and implementing effective policies taking both economic and social perspectives into account has already become governments’ challenge and responsibility. Failing to do so would the profound socioeconomic impacts of structural unemployment issue worsen social divergence and eventually lead to political instability.
To address and study causes and impacts of structural unemployment on the Asia Pacific region in the post-crisis era, Chinese Taipei Pacific Economic Cooperation Committee (CTPECC) proposes this international project: “Examining the Mid- and Long-Term Structural Unemployment in Asia-Pacific”. The 26th Pacific Economic Community seminar is held to a) thoroughly examine the structural unemployment issues, phenomena and relevant impacts, b) analyze and explore factors that have caused structural unemployment, and c) identify potential solutions to the problem of structural
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