European social models from crisis to crisis: employment and inequality in the era of monetary integration
Dølvik, Jon Erik ; Martin, Andrew
Oxford University Press - New York
2014
XIII, 442 p.
economic recession ; employment ; EMU ; European integration ; European social model ; social inequality
Social policy
English
Bibliogr.;Index
978-0-19-871796-6
02.01-64798
"Provides a unique overview of social model developments in key European countries over the past 25 years
Gathers a selection of outstanding international scholars which offer a comprehensive view on the recent crisis and its background causes
Features case studies of 11 countries and comparative analysis of policy coalitions and labor market outcomes
This book analyzes the interaction of European social models the institutions structuring labor markets' supply side and their turbulent macroeconomic environment from the deep Europe-wide recession, ending Germanys post-unification boom, through monetary union's establishment, to the Great Recession following the recent financial crisis. The analysis reaches two conclusions challenging the dominant view that the social models caused unemployment by impairing labor markets' efficiency in the name of equity. First, the social models' employment and distributive effects are far outweighed by their macroeconomic environment, especially in the Eurozone, where its truncated structure of economic governance transformed the Great Recession into a sovereign debt crisis. Second, instead of a trade-off between efficiency and equity, the employment effects of counteracting markets tendency to generate inequality depends on the macroeconomic conditions under which it occurs and how it is done."
Paper
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