Labour and social security
Filter by year:- Dutch pension provisions highest in Europe
- Unemployment continues to drop
- Fewer teachers start teaching straight after qualifying
- Number of jobs grows considerably
- Decelerating growth in hours worked in temp jobs
- Sustained reduction social security benefits
- One in seven fully disabled work in paid jobs
- Unemployed residents of special attention districts often prepared to work
- Job vacancies at record level
- Unemployment falls further
- Two thirds of social security recipients low-educated
- Far fewer young big-city dwellers depend on social security
- Overall social security debt amounts to 1.3 billion euro
- Women's pension build-up still trailing
- Nearly half a million people not receiving benefits are seeking jobs
- Unemployment further down
- Relatively more old than young people work
- More Polish workers
- Substantial rise collectively negotiated wages in third quarter
- Short-term income support more likely to be cut
- Unemployment down
- A look at society: involved, safe, and full of colour
- People with mental health problems less likely to be in work
- Steady fall in income support benefits
- Unemployment decreases at a slower rate
- Marginal increase in number of job openings
- Dutch minimum wage among the six highest in the EU
- Three time as many "difficult" job vacancies
- Unemployment 346 thousand in second quarter
- Employment increase across the board
- One and a half percent health insurance defaulters
- Dutch unemployment rate lowest in EU
- Unemployment among people with foreign background declines marginally
- Second-quarter increase in collectively agreed wages 1.5 percent
- Unemployment rate lowest in four years
- People active in short-hour jobs are mainly young
- Fewer youngsters without a basic qualification employed
- Income support benefits drop below 300 thousand
- More older people active in short-hour jobs
- More than one thousand health and safety organisations in the Netherlands
- Job vacancies down slightly
- Sharp fall in unemployment
- Carers make little use of special care leave
- Compensation for childcare costs amounts to 845 million euro
- Life course regulation not popular yet
- Few working days lost through industrial action
- Most single-parent families on income support female-headed
- Unemployment almost unchanged
- Increase in collectively negotiated wages slows down in early 2007
- One in nine income support claimants is 27 or younger
- One million households receive rent rebate
- Job vacancies up slightly
- Unemployment down across all provinces
- Unemployment hardly changed
- More than one third of adults received care allowance
- Income support at lowest level for 25 years
- One in eleven old age pensioners live abroad
- Occupational level of people with a non-western background on average lower
- Unemployment considerably down
- More full-timers active on the labour market
- Relatively few non-workers in large cities
- Continuous job growth accelerates
- Unemployment among foreigners down slightly
- Unemployment dips below 400 thousand mark
- Few mothers work full-time
- Collectively agreed wages up 2 percent in 2006