EU Jobs
Ultimate EU Job Hunting Guide
Home
Find Your EU Job

Norway Jobs

Reputed to be the world’s best place to live in, Norway is a premium choice for many job seekers. Whether from Asia, Africa, Latin America or America, people from all over the globe are choosing Norway for employment due to its excellent employment opportunities and high standard of living.

 

The achievement of high employment has been a priority item on the political agenda of post-war Norway. During the 1970s, the development of the North Sea oil fields combined with an active labour market policy led to significantly lower unemployment in Norway than in other industrial countries. Since the 1980s, however, the globalization of the economy has tied Norway more closely to world economic trends, and unemployment levels now tend to reflect fluctuations at the international level. In 2002, the rate of unemployment was 3.9% of the workforce.

 

The network of government employment offices established at the county and municipal levels comprises one of the most important instruments of Norwegian labour market policy. The public authorities have also implemented wide-ranging employment measures such as wage support for companies hiring new employees, training initiatives and work placement programmes as well as special measures for individuals with limited vocational choices.

 

During the period between the world wars, Norway, like the rest of Europe, was hit by mass unemployment. Levels peaked in 1933, when a third of the unionized workforce was jobless. During the post-WWII reconstruction, there was broad political agreement that full employment would be one of the most important aims of the new Norwegian economic policy. This consensus has been maintained by the various governments ever since.

 

The North Sea oil industry gave rise to many new jobs in Norway, but unemployment nevertheless began to rise in the beginning of the 1980s. Problems in an overheated Norwegian and world economy led to a new and more serious increase in unemployment starting in 1987-88.

 

In recent years, the size of the workforce has stabilized at 2.0-2.1 million employees. The number of women employees escalated in the 1980s and has since remained high. There are a considerable number of part-time employees on the Norwegian workforce. Just under half of all women and about 10% of all men work fewer than 36 hours a week.

 

Foreigners working in Norway are said to be treated equally and many of them describe their working experience as pleasant and unforgettable.

Source: Norway

EU Jobs

 

Related Articles:

Denmark Jobs
Employment Assimilation of Immigrants in the Netherlands
Employment in Austria
Employment of Foreign Workers in the United Kingdom
Europeans at Work
Greece Jobs
Immigrants in Denmark
Immigration to Austria
Immigration to Europe
Immigration to France
Immigration to Germany
Immigration to Greece
Immigration to Ireland
Immigration to Norway
Immigration to Poland
Immigration to Spain
Immigration to Sweden
Immigration to the United Kingdom
Ireland Jobs
Italy Jobs
Labour and Employers in Germany
Labour Market in France
Labour Market in Portugal
Labour Market in Spain
Labour-market Situation in Sweden
Labour Migration in the Netherlands
Living, Working and Studying in the EU
Migrant Workers in Italy
Norway Jobs
Poland Jobs
Portugal: Visa and Immigration
Skills Needed in EU
Tips on Finding a Job in Europe