Labour and social security
Filter by year:- Fewer households rely on benefits for a long period of time
- No further employment growth
- Careers of doctorate holders
- Unemployment remains unchanged
- More people looking for work
- Unemployed more likely to find flexible than permanent job
- Men and full-timers most likely to work overtime
- Fewer income support benefits for young people
- Decrease in disability benefits slowing down
- Decline in number of hours worked in temp jobs
- Unemployment further up
- Number of job vacancies marginally down
- Fewer men receive unemployment benefits
- More employed develop burnout symptoms
- Unemployment further up
- Trade union members increasingly over 65
- Collectively agreed wage rates up 1.3 percent in third quarter
- Slightly more job vacancies
- More than one quarter of employed work from home
- Sickness absence lowest among hotel and restaurant workers
- Costs of social security amount to 179 billion euro in 2010
- Modest employment growth
- Sharp growth social assistance benefits granted to over-65s
- Unemployment further up
- Slower increase in spending on disability benefits for the young in 2010
- Half of people willing to work not immediately available or not actively looking for work
- Slightly more job vacancies
- Increase social security benefits slows down
- Further increase in number of hours worked in temp jobs
- Increase labour costs at lowest level in two decades
- Unemployment up in July
- Number of job vacancies marginally up
- Male unemployment in age category 25-45 more than twice as high as three years ago
- Increase in temporary contracts with prospect of permanent appointment
- Unemployment down
- Dramatic employment growth in care sector
- Retirement age employees further up
- More job vacancies
- More workers from Central and Eastern Europe
- Youth unemployment in the Netherlands lowest in the European Union
- More people unemployed
- Baby boom generation accounts for rapid growth AOW benefits
- More jobs than twelve months ago
- One-and-a-half -income earners disinclined to change working hours
- Doctoral degree makes a difference on the labour market
- Unemployed more engaged in volunteer work than people with paid jobs
- Half of social security benefits go to families with children
- More job vacancies
- Lower educated accounted for most of fall in unemployment
- Number of income support benefits continues to rise
- Growth number of hours worked in temp jobs accelerates
- One in seven employees hindered by administrative chores
- Unemployment further down
- Number of job vacancies continues to grow
- Two in three Bonaire residents work
- High proportion of benefit recipients in provinces of Limburg and Groningen
- Slight fall in unemployment
- Most strikes in 2010 organised in mail and transport
- Modest wage increase in first quarter of 2011
- More job vacancies in the private sector
- Average weekly working hours hardly changed in recent years
- Ten percent fewer people without medical insurance in 2010
- More employees find jobs
- Poor chances on the job market for chronic patients
- Unemployment levels off
- Unemployment increases most rapidly in South Holland
- 535 bankruptcies filed in February
- Fewer women stay at home to care
- Dutch women: high labour participation rate and high education level
- Number of social security benefits up by 26 thousand in 2010
- More hours worked in temp jobs
- Dutch labour market gains momentum
- Emancipation monitor 2010
- Unemployment marginally down
- Marginal increase number of vacancies
- Unemployment among people with non-western background further up in 2010
- Number of disability benefits down by more than 100 thousand in half a decade
- Unemployment further down
- Collectively negotiated wage rates up 1.3 percent in 2010