00917nam0-22003011i-450-99000766953040332120111026100459.0000766953FED01000766953(Aleph)000766953FED0100076695320030814d--------km-y0itay50------baita<<Le >>procedure concorsualiCommento pratico - Formulario - Aspetti fiscali. Fallimento. Concordato preventivo.Amministrazione controllatadi Francesco Abate , Sandro Merz.PadovaCEDAM1987.IX, 551 p.24 cm346.07Abate,Francesco236494Merz,SandroITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK990007669530403321DPR 25-3254955DEC21-AA-144474DDCPDECDDCPProcedure concorsuali679997UNINA00994nam--2200337---450-99000315041020331620080925100519.00-471-67816-3000315041USA01000315041(ALEPH)000315041USA0100031504120080925d2005----km-y0itay50------baengUSa---||||001yyLandslides in practiceInvestigations, analysis, and remedial/preventative options in soilsDerek H. CornforthHobokenWileycopyr. 2005XVI, 596 p.ill.29 cm0012001Meccanica dei terreni624.15136CORNFORTH,Derek H.602273ITsalbcISBD990003150410203316624.15136 COR37463/CBS624.1513600217720BKSCICBAS1020080925USA011005Landslides in practice1018232UNISA05607oam 22007815 450 991095979600332120240516190904.09786613719966978128087865712808786579780821395509082139550510.1596/978-0-8213-9549-3(CKB)2670000000208514(EBL)953214(OCoLC)798536280(SSID)ssj0000677937(PQKBManifestationID)12347296(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000677937(PQKBWorkID)10696987(PQKB)10061862(MiAaPQ)EBC953214(Au-PeEL)EBL953214(CaPaEBR)ebr10578613(CaONFJC)MIL371996(OCoLC)808347805(The World Bank)17223088(US-djbf)17223088(Perlego)1483834(EXLCZ)99267000000020851420120322d2012 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierIn from the shadow : integrating Europe's informal labor /Truman Packard, Johannes Koettl, Claudio Montenegro1st ed.Washington DC :World Bank,2012.pages cmDirections in developmentDescription based upon print version of record.9780821395493 0821395491 Includes bibliographical references.Contents; Acknowledgments; About the Authors; Abbreviations; Overview; What Is the Shadow Economy?; Why Does It Matter?; Figures; O.1 The Shadow Economy as a Percentage of Recorded GDP, Various Countries, 2007; O.2 Informal Work as a Percentage of the Labor Force; Who Is Working Informally in Europe's Shadow Economy?; Boxes; O.1 The Shadow Economy and Informal Employment: Terms Used in This Book; Structural Incentives Are Important, Particularly Taxation; Formal Work Should "Pay" for Low-Wage Earners; Labor Market Regulation Should Promote Formal Job CreationBuilding Institutional Credibility and Trust in the State Is CriticalNotes; References; Chapter 1 Informal Employment in Europe's Shadow Economy; Europe's Informal Employment in Context; 1.1 Estimates of the Size of the Shadow Economy as a Percentage of GDP; 1.1 Grasping at Shadows? The Shadow Economy as a Percentage of GDP; 1.2 Percentage of the Labor Force in Informal Employment: Firm Size Criterion for Dependent Employed; 1.3 Percentage of the Labor Force in Informal Employment: Social Insurance Criterion for Dependent Employed; Tables1.1 Informality Rates across Different Groups in Six New Member States, 2008 (percent)1.4 Extent of Informal Work by Contract Criterion; Profile of People Working Informally; 1.5 Informal Work in Europe Is Mainly Taken Up by Men; 1.6 Age Profile of People in Formal and Informal Employment; 1.7 Educational Attainment of People in Formal and Informal Employment; 1.8 Distribution of the Formally and Informally Employed across Skilled and Nonskilled, Manual and Nonmanual Work; 1.9 Distribution of Formally and Informally Employed across Economic Sectors1.10 Informal Workers Who Say That They Belong to Groups Suffering Discrimination1.11 Are Those Working Informally More Likely to Belong to a Native Ethnic Minority?; 1.12 Share of Immigrants without the Right to Work because of Nationality in Formal and Informal Employment; 1.13 Share of Natives with Immigrant Background and Immigrants with the Right to Work because of Nationality in Formal and Informal Employment; The Economic Cycle and Movement across the Labor Market; 1.14 Informal Workers Who Have Experienced Long-Term Unemployment1.15 In Most of Europe, Informal Employment Falls as Unemployment Rises1.16 Probability of Informal Work in Poland Grew in the High-Growth Years; 1.17 In Romania Movement from Unemployment into Informal Work Was Greater and Faster than into Formal Work; 1.18 The Share of the Labor Force in Informal Work Was Relatively Stable in the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic; 1.19 The Probability of Moving from Formal Employment and Informal Employment to Unemployment Was Similar in the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic; Notes; ReferencesChapter 2 Conceptual Framework: More than Structural IncentivesWhat to do about the extent of unregulated informal employment and the size of the shadow economy is a dilemma that has been gaining urgency, particularly in Europe's periphery. The forces that accompany globalization put a premium on mobility and skill-renewal. Rapid population ageing will require that people work longer and be far more productive. To achieve this, social and economic institutions have to be more pro-employment, encouraging greater participation in the formal economy. And looking ahead, public financial resources will be increasingly scarce, giving urgency to measures that caWorld Bank e-Library.Informal sector (Economics)TaxationEuropeTaxationEuropeInformal sector (Economics)TaxationTaxation331Packard Truman1105144Koettl Johannes1813155Montenegro Claudio1524460World Bank.DLCDLCBOOK9910959796003321In from the shadow4365954UNINA