Poverty and Insecurity 2012
DOI: 10.1332/policypress/9781847429117.003.0003
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Researching the low-pay, no-pay cycle and recurrent poverty

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Cited by 94 publications
(171 citation statements)
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“…Poor employment retention among low paid workers feeds 'low pay-no pay cycles' that bind individuals and their families to lives on low, insecure incomes -whether in work or claiming benefits (Shildrick et al 2010). Adopting S-TMD approach, which recognises the wider impact on society, can lead to the identification of the cost of labour turnover for the individual in terms of reduced household income and for society in terms of the health and welfare costs of unemployment.…”
Section: Martin and Schmidt 2010) Our Reorientation Of Tmd Towards Tmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Poor employment retention among low paid workers feeds 'low pay-no pay cycles' that bind individuals and their families to lives on low, insecure incomes -whether in work or claiming benefits (Shildrick et al 2010). Adopting S-TMD approach, which recognises the wider impact on society, can lead to the identification of the cost of labour turnover for the individual in terms of reduced household income and for society in terms of the health and welfare costs of unemployment.…”
Section: Martin and Schmidt 2010) Our Reorientation Of Tmd Towards Tmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, work-welfare cycling among young people can have long-term impacts in terms of weaker employment prospects (Furlong et al, 2011;Gebel, 2010;Kellard et al, 2007;Worth, 2005), 'wage scars' (Ben-Galim et al, 2011) and recurrent poverty (Goulden, 2010;McCollum, 2012b). Shildrick et al (2010) found that churning labour market careers typical of young adults continued into their thirties and sometimes beyond.…”
Section: Figure 1 Herementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, it was clear that manual work remained prominent in the work-based dispositions of many of the young men in our study. Despite this, they found themselves stuck in the 'churn' (MacDonald and Marsh, 2005;Shildrick et al, 2010) between part-time work and unemployment. For those young people who were unemployed at the time of interview (predominantly young men), the search for work dominated discussion-and had important implications in terms of their identities and activities.…”
Section: Glasgow: From Second City To Commonwealth Legacymentioning
confidence: 99%