01079pab a2200169 454500008004000000100001600040245002700056260000900083300001300092362000800105520065900113650003400772650003100806650001500837700002200852773003500874180718b2000 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aPeck, Jamie aBeyond `employability' c2000 ap.729-49 aNov aConcentrating on British welfare-to-work policy, the paper presents a critique of `employability-based' approaches to supply-side intervention in the labour market. It is argued that the likely macroeconomic impacts of the Blair Government's `New Deal' programme are being exaggerated, and that a more realistic appreciation of the limits and possibilities of such supply-side interventions is required. Some suggestions for a reformed approach to welfare-to-work policy - based on a client-centred and developmental ethos, an enlarged concept of `employment' (embracing the social economy) and active social redistribution - are proposed. - Reproduced aLabour market - Great Britain aEmployment - Great Britain aEmployment aTheodore, Nikolas aCambridge Journal of Economics