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This Anglo-German network is being set up to explore the dynamics of the school-to-work transition and its consequences across the life course in the context of educational expansion and technological change. Educational expansion, in particular of higher education, changes school-to-work transition patterns and individual career development in the labour market. At the same time, technological change affects the school-to-work transition by altering the process of individual skill acquisition and the fields of training and study available. The implications of these macro developments for social and educational inequality remain unclear.

The benefit of an Anglo-German comparison in this context is the different timing and degree of educational expansion and technological change in their respective labour markets. Aligning research strategies using German and British data will enable us to generalise our findings given the different institutional settings. The first meeting of the network will focus on innovative empirical designs and on longitudinal data to provide new insights to these broad themes.

Participants in the network should be close to completing a PhD or be within seven years of receipt of a PhD. They should be quantitative education or labour market researchers (economists, sociologists, psychologists, or a related social science discipline) and carry out research on the school-to-work transition and its consequences in the UK or Germany using (quasi-)experimental designs or longitudinal data. Ten will be based in Germany and 10 in the UK.

A successful academic career relies on building strong international networks; however, opportunities for early career researchers to do this are limited. At the same time, there is uncertainty about how Brexit will affect the research funding landscape, particularly for international collaborations. The United Kingdom and Germany have strong research institutions and excellent sources of longitudinal data that can be used to answer questions about education, skills, and life outcomes.

A follow-up workshop will take place at University College London in the autumn.

Senior academics

  • Prof. Michael Gebel (University of Bamberg)
  • Prof. Sandra McNally (University of Surrey and London School of Economics)

We are very pleased to announce the first CASD / IAB Conference on the advances in social sciences using administrative and survey data. The CASD and the IAB have recently established cross-country access to confidential administrative data in France and Germany. The aim is to foster and facilitate the use of rich register datasets – which can be partly combined with detailed survey data – from both countries and to improve the data sources for comparative research in social sciences.

The conference aims to bring together researchers using confidential administrative data in France and Germany and also welcomes researchers using similar data from other countries.

For the T2M 2019 conference, the program committee has selected special sessions organized by leading researchers in these fields:

  • “Expectations in macroeconomics” by Ruediger Bachmann (University of Notre Dame)
  • “Safe assets and the macroeconomy” by Kenza Benhima (Université de Lausanne)
  • “IAB data and macro applications” by Britta Gehrke (IAB and FAU)
  • “Vacancies and recruitment” by Leo Kaas (Goethe-Universität Frankfurt)
  • “Real exchange rate dynamics” by Gernot Müller (Universität Tübingen)

Technological advances in the fields of robotics and artificial intelligence are increasingly making it possible for machines to perform tasks that previously could only be done by humans. This development has sparked scientific and public debates on the future of work, often dealing with automation and the substitution of labor. The transformation of the working environment goes hand in hand with a reorganization of company structures, occupational and workplace-related content and skill requirements. New inequality paths are emerging and labor market participants are being confronted differently with these changes. In addition, educational and other institutional frameworks keep influencing the labor market. The aim of this conference is to bring together economists, sociologists and researchers from related fields to discuss frontier research on labor market effects of automation and digitization. Special focus is on the following questions:

  • How do new technologies affect the level and structure of employment?
  • How are new technologies changing work content?
  • What are the (non-)monetary returns to work content?
  • How do new technologies shape skill demands and which role do social skills play?
  • How does technology affect overall inequality and also inequality between firms and workers?
  • How does the role of educational and labor market institutions change?
  • How do firms and workers adapt to changing requirements?
  • How can policy help firms and workers who are struggling to adapt to digital transformation?

The scientific committee encourages theoretical, empirical, and policy-oriented contributions from all areas of labor economics, labor sociology and related fields.

Während für viele regulär Beschäftigte Kurzarbeit die unmittelbaren Folgen der Coronakrise abfedern konnte, mussten Selbstständige und Menschen in prekären Arbeitsverhältnissen während der empfindliche Einkommenseinbußen hinnehmen. Je länger die Krise dauert steigt das Risiko, dass sich Arbeitslosigkeit verfestigt, zudem müssen jetzt Kurzarbeitsregelungen so gestaltet werden, dass sie den Aufschwung nicht gefährden. Der aktuelle OECD-Beschäftigungsausblick analysiert die aktuellen Trends auf dem Arbeitsmarkt und formuliert Empfehlungen für einen tragfähigen Aufschwung. Auf der Veranstaltungen sollen auf Basis des Berichts die Implikationen für Deutschland diskutiert werden.

Das OECD Berlin Centre und das IAB laden herzlich ein zu Vortrag und Diskussion.

Die Digitalisierung ist Treiber eines Strukturwandels, der das Wirtschafts- und Arbeitsleben dynamisch verändert. Auf der Konferenz soll analysiert und diskutiert werden, wie sich digitale Potenziale nutzen und gestalten lassen.

The Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research (LISER) and the Institute for Employment Research (IAB) are pleased to announce the 1st LISER-IAB Conference on Digital Transformation and the Future of Work. The objective of the conference is to bring together researchers in social sciences to discuss their more recent research related to digital transformation and the future of work. Researchers interested in presenting at the LISER-IAB conference are invited to submit theoretical, empirical and experimental contributions.