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Evidence-based policy making

World of Labour is an online platform that provides policy analysts, journalists, academics, and society generally with relevant and concise information on labour market issues. Based on the latest research, it provides current thinking on labour markets worldwide in a clear and accessible style. World of Labour aims to support evidence-based policy making and increase awareness of labour market issues, including current concerns like the impact of technological progress, and longer-term problems like inequality.

 

Featured Article

The economics of mental health

With modern psychological therapy, mentally ill people can become more productive and more satisfied with life

In a typical country, one in five people suffers from a mental illness, the great majority from depression or crippling anxiety. Mental illness accounts for half of all illness up to age 45 in rich countries, making it the most prevalent disease among working-age people; it also accounts for close to half of disability benefits in many countries. Mentally ill people are less likely to be employed and, if employed, more likely to be out sick or working below par. If mentally ill people received treatment so that they had the same employment rate as the rest of the population, total employment would be 4% higher, adding many billions to national output.

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  • Minimum wage policy and undeclared wages in transition economies

    Increasing minimum wage can decrease labour tax evasion

    Nicolas Gavoille , March 2026

    How do minimum wage policies interact with labour tax evasion? In many transition economies, two features stand out: a large spike in the wage distribution at the minimum wage and widespread use of “envelope wages”—undeclared cash paid in addition to official earnings. This spike can be explained by the over-representation of tax-evading employers among minimum wage payers. In such a context, raising the minimum wage may serve as an enforcement tool by compelling evading firms to convert part of the undeclared pay into formal wages in order to comply with the legal minimum.

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  • The labor market in Mexico, 2005–2025

    Mexico faces challenges in creating more high-paying jobs

    While Mexico has improved the education of its labor force, maintained a stable macroeconomic environment, and been friendly to international trade, its labor market still faces many challenges. In particular, Mexico has difficulty creating high-paying jobs: the share of informal employment has remained stagnant for the last 20 years, and, by 2025, remains above 50%. These problems are particularly poignant in southern Mexico.
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  • Leveraging covariates in regression discontinuity designs

    Proper use of covariates in regression discontinuity designs can enhance empirical scientific discoveries and evidence-based policy decisions

    It is common practice to incorporate additional covariates in empirical economics. In the context of regression discontinuity (RD) designs, covariate adjustment plays multiple roles, making it essential to understand its impact on analysis and conclusions. Typically implemented via local least squares regressions, covariate adjustment can serve three main distinct purposes: (i) improving the efficiency of RD average causal effect estimators, (ii) learning about heterogeneous RD policy effects, and (iii) changing the RD parameter of interest.
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  • The labor market in the Netherlands, 2001–2024 Updated

    The observations point to a marked underlying shift in bargaining power from unions to employers

    The Netherlands has long been an example of a highly and centrally institutionalized labor market paying considerable attention to equity concerns. Fracturing of the labor force by the rapid demise of the single-earner model and accelerating immigration, falling union density, and reductions in welfare state provisions have shrunk labor’s market power centrally and decentrally. Wages lagged far behind productivity growth, job security strongly declined and wage inequality increased. This comes to the fore with a lack of offensive union power when after 2016 labor demand accelerated and the economy and employment quickly reached new heights after the pandemic crisis.
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