Labour and social security
Filter by year:- Slight increase in job numbers
- Sickness absence down slightly in 2004
- Unemployment slightly down in September-November
- More and more Dutch men take parental leave
- Nearly one million people involuntarily unemployed
- Lowest hourly wage rises for ten years
- Fewer people claiming benefits
- Robust increase number of vacancies
- Top ten male and female dominated occupations
- Unemployment virtually unchanged
- Fewer workers under severe pressure of time
- Better opportunities on the job market with a starter qualification
- Formerly disabled workers off sick twice as often
- Unemployment stable
- Collectively agreed wage rises up again
- Largest job losses in South Holland in 2004
- Job losses come to a halt
- Disability benefits nearly back at 1998 level
- Unemployment down slightly
- Fewer people retire at 60
- Fewer hours worked than agreed
- Fewer people with disabilities working
- Fewer young people employed
- Number of vacancies no longer increasing
- Full-time/part-time job most popular combination among couples
- Unemployment remains stable
- Over one third of jobholders are regularly working overtime
- Revision press release on income support benefits
- One quarter of over-50s who left the job market seek to re-enter
- One quarter of over-50s who left the job market seek to re-enter
- Burn-out and psychological workload
- Unemployment rate stable
- Collective wage rises smallest for 20 years
- Hefty increase in income support benefits
- Incidental wage increases up in 2003
- Job losses slightly down
- Workers less satisfied with pay and promotion prospects
- Employment at municipalities past its peak
- Few employed over-50s in large cities
- Unemployment unchanged
- More over-65s active in voluntary sector
- Fewer partial unemployment benefits
- Vacancies continue to rise
- Unemployment still rising
- More single parents working
- Youth unemployment no longer rising
- More long-term unemployed
- More over-50s employed
- Surge in collective sector jobs comes to an end
- Unemployment continues to rise
- Income support claimants stable in 2004
- Fewer job losses
- More people without medical insurance
- Unemployment remains virtually unchanged
- Unemployment up in all provinces
- Marginal increase in number of vacancies
- Unemployment growth rate among foreigners slowing down
- Vacancies for school-leavers in decline
- Nearly 480 thousand unemployed in the Netherlands
- Dutch labour costs in line with Western Europe
- Do employees with a foreign background get equal pay?
- Who doesn't have a paid job?
- Revised version: Fewer people on income support
- Fewer people on income support
- More vacancies for high-level jobs
- Employees financial institutions well-paid
- Unemployment increasing
- Collectively agreed wages keep up with inflation rate in 2004
- Fewer flexible workers