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Revenus et patrimoine des ménages. Edition 2002-2003

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The article was published on 2002-12-01 and is currently open access. It has received 2 citations till now.

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The welfare state of the civil (or public) servants in Europe : a comparison of the pension systems for civil (or public) servants in France, Great Britain, and Germany

TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic comparison of the old age pension system in three countries: France, Great Britain and Germany is presented, where the main aim is to elaborate the main structure of the pension schemes in the civil services in these countries, which, indeed, differ a lot, to relate them to the life chances of civil servants in their old age, and to evaluate the effects of pension policy reforms in the public sector in order to solve problems of population ageing.
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14. Urban poverty in developed countries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the urban/rural dimension of poverty in developed countries and show that the size of urban poverty depends on where the boundaries of metropolitan districts are drawn and observe that overlooking geographical differences in the cost of living is a particularly relevant hypothesis.
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The welfare state of the civil (or public) servants in Europe : a comparison of the pension systems for civil (or public) servants in France, Great Britain, and Germany

TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic comparison of the old age pension system in three countries: France, Great Britain and Germany is presented, where the main aim is to elaborate the main structure of the pension schemes in the civil services in these countries, which, indeed, differ a lot, to relate them to the life chances of civil servants in their old age, and to evaluate the effects of pension policy reforms in the public sector in order to solve problems of population ageing.
Book ChapterDOI

14. Urban poverty in developed countries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the urban/rural dimension of poverty in developed countries and show that the size of urban poverty depends on where the boundaries of metropolitan districts are drawn and observe that overlooking geographical differences in the cost of living is a particularly relevant hypothesis.