Europe's mass unemployment and the call for extensive labor market de-regulation have, perhaps more than any other contemporary issue, impassioned political debate and academic research. With contributions from economists, political scientists and sociologists, Why Deregulate Labour Markets? takes a hard look at the empirical connections between unemployment and regulation in Europe today, utilizing both in-depth nation analyses and broader-based international comparisons.
Europe's mass unemployment and the call for extensive labor market de-regulation have, perhaps more than any other contemporary issue, impassioned political debate and academic research. With contributions from economists, political scientists and sociologists, Why Deregulate Labour Markets? takes a hard look at the empirical connections between unemployment and regulation in Europe today, utilizing both in-depth nation analyses and broader-based international comparisons.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Gøsta Esping-Andersen ( Professor University Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona and University of Trento, Italia) Marino Regini (Professor of Sociology, University of Milano, and Director of IRES Lombardia)
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction PART I. LABOUR MARKET REFORM IN EUROPE The dilemmas of labour market regulation The dynamics of labour market reform in European countries Who is harmed by Labour Market Regulations? Quantitative Evidence Regulation and context. Reconsidering the correlates of unemployment PART II. NATIONAL VARIATIONS River Crossing or Cold Bath? Deregulation and Employment in Britain Going different ways: labour market policy in Denmark and Sweden The Dutch miracle? Germany: A regulated flexibility France: The deregulation that never existed Italy: the long times of consensual re-regulation The Spanish experiment: pros and cons of the flexibility at the margin Conclusions
Introduction PART I. LABOUR MARKET REFORM IN EUROPE The dilemmas of labour market regulation The dynamics of labour market reform in European countries Who is harmed by Labour Market Regulations? Quantitative Evidence Regulation and context. Reconsidering the correlates of unemployment PART II. NATIONAL VARIATIONS River Crossing or Cold Bath? Deregulation and Employment in Britain Going different ways: labour market policy in Denmark and Sweden The Dutch miracle? Germany: A regulated flexibility France: The deregulation that never existed Italy: the long times of consensual re-regulation The Spanish experiment: pros and cons of the flexibility at the margin Conclusions
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