Flexicurity: the concept, its potentials and limits - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 33
About This Presentation
Title:

Flexicurity: the concept, its potentials and limits

Description:

If 'state of affairs' then flexicurity policies are not ... in shadow of strong system of dismissal protection (1999 Law on Flexibility and Security) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:61
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 34
Provided by: Bra1151
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Flexicurity: the concept, its potentials and limits


1
Flexicurity the concept, its potentials and
limits
  • Ton Wilthagen
  • Flexicurity Research Programme
  • Tilburg University, the Netherlands
  • www.tilburguniversity.nl/flexicurity

2
Outline of this presentation
  • The flexibility security nexus and the concept
    of flexicuriy
  • EU developments
  • State of affairs or policy strategy
  • Dutch vs. Danish style
  • The potentials of flexicurity a comparative view
  • regimes and national systems
  • preconditions of flexicurity
  • The limits and demarcation of flexicurity systems

3
Flexicurity todays buzzword in employment and
labour market policy
  • Discussed in many countries
  • Key issue within EU policy
  • Picked up by OECD
  • Council of Europe Forum on reconciling
    flexibility and social cohesion
  • ILO project on flexicurity in transition
    economies
  • Key focus of research in many institutes

4
The Flexibility-Security Nexus
  • On the one hand there is strong demand for
    further flexibilisation of labour markets,
    employment and the work organisation,
  • while at same time an equally strong demand
    exists for providing security to vulnerable
    groups of employees and to other outsiders in the
    labour market, and preserving social cohesion in
    our societies

5
Developments in EU policy-making (1)
  • Flexibility-security nexus explicitly addressed
    at EU-level
  • White Paper on Growth, Competitiveness and
    Employment (1993)
  • Green Paper on Partnership for New Organisation
    of Work (1997)
  • The key issue is to strike the right balance
    between flexibility and security

6
Developments in EU policy-making (2)
  • Emergence of a social-policy
  • perspective next to already
  • existing economic perspective
  • Addressed at EU summits in
  • Essen 1994
  • Florence 1996
  • Amsterdam 1997
  • Luxembourg 1997

7
The European Employment Strategy (1)
  • Pursuit of a (new) balance between flexibility
    and security is especially manifest within the
    European Employment Strategy.
  • Member States will facilitate the adaptability of
    workers and firms to change, taking account of
    the need for both flexibility and security and
    emphasising the key role of the social partners
    in this respect.
  • But what has changed after the 2nd report of the
    European Employment Task Force (Wim Kok) and the
    reconsideration of the Lisbon strategy?

8
The European Employment Strategy (2)
  • After crisis on progress of Lisbon strategy the
    guideliness on growth and guideliness for
    employment have been integrated (April 2005)
  • Notice change of wording in stead of striking
    the right balance the guideline now reads
  • Promote flexibility combined with employment
    security and reduce labour segmentation

9
Views on flexicurity (1)
  • Normative or empirically-oriented concept?
  • Flexicurity as a state of affairs or as a type
    of policy?
  • If state of affairs then flexicurity policies
    are not necessarily in place
  • If flexicurity policies then state of affairs
    may be reached or not (yet)

10
Views on flexicurity (2)
  • Flexicurity high levels of both flexibility and
    security? Trade-off, balance, interconnection or
    match?
  • Flexibility through security and vice versa?
  • Flexicurity security for flexible workforces?
  • What type of flexicurity and for whom?

11
Flexibility versus security dimensions/trade-offs
12
Flexicurity as a policy strategy
  • Attempting, synchronically and deliberately,
  • to enhance
  • (in particular) employment security and social
    security, notably for weaker groups in and
    outside the labour market
  • flexibility of labour markets, the work
    organisation and labour relations

13
Flexicurity as a state
  • a (high) degree of job, employment, income and
    combination security that facilitates the labour
    market careers and biographies of workers and
    allows for enduring and high quality labour
    market participation and social inclusion, while
    at the same time providing
  • a (high) degree of numerical (both external an
    internal), functional and wage flexibility that
    allows for labour markets' and companies' timely
    and adequate adjustment to changing conditions in
    order to maintain and enhance competitiveness and
    productivity.

14
Other important dimensions
  • Flexicurity strategies can vary along three other
    dimensions
  • Levels at which flexicurity strategies are
    initiated (national, regional, local, industry,
    or company level)
  • Actors involved in the flexicurity strategies
    (state, regional and local government
    representatives, social partners, individual
    firm, individual employee)
  • Codification of flexicurity strategies (law,
    collective labour agreement, social pact, social
    plan, individual contract, HRM policies).

15
Flexicurity Dutch style
  • Deliberate and negotiated win win strategies,
    based on trade offs between external and internal
    numerical flexibility and employment security
    rather than job security (crucial role of social
    partners)
  • Programme of normalization of forms of atypical
    work part-time, fixed-term and agency work in
    shadow of strong system of dismissal protection
    (1999 Law on Flexibility and Security)
  • Paralled by strong economic growth and low
    unemployment 1994-2001 (Dutch miracle). But
    high peaks, low dips!
  • Whats next normalization of self-employment?
    Flexibilisation of core-labour?

16
Flexicurity Danish style
  • Flexicurity as a state, an equilibrium based on
    mother of all deals end of 19th century? Labour
    inherently flexible, dismissal protection
    insignificant
  • Flexicurity no big deal in Denmark, label
    picked up après la lettre? But consultations and
    coordination are important and golden triangle
    developed over time
  • Paralled by continuous economic growth and low
    unemployment
  • Whats next? Steady as she goes? Addressing
    negative effects, pressure on flexibility-security
    nexus?

17
Dutch and Danish performance (source Netherlands
Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis)
  • Denmark Netherlands
  • Unemployment Nov 2004 5. 4.7
  • Expend. activation policy
  • ( GPD 2000) 1.6 1.7
  • Participation rate 79.4 76.4
  • Average Unemploy. Benefit 68 66
  • Maximum duration
  • Unemployment benefit 4 years 5 years
  • Inflow Unemployment
  • scheme (2000) 19.6 5.2
  • Long-term unemployment 19.9 29.2
  • Job transitions (1980-1993) 30 16

18
Dutch focus strongly on companies
responsibilities by using financial incentives
  • System of gate-keeping

19
Danish advocate let it flow approach, bridges
no barriers, voluntary corporate social
responsibility
  • System of open gates

20
In search of the best of both worlds
  • Potentials

21
Employment regimes and the flexibility-security
nexus
22
A flexicurity index of European countries
(Tangian 2004)
  • Definition of flexicurity is limited to flexible
    employment Flexicurity is the employment and
    social security of atypically employed, that is,
    other than permanent full-time
  • highest rate of flexicurity Netherlands
  • highest all security Sweden
  • lowest level of flexicurity Portugal, Czech
    Republic and United Kingdom
  • lowest level of all security United Kingdom,
    Spain

23
European Employment Strategy indicators on
flexibility and security
  • the number of transitions between non-employment
    and employment and within employment by type of
    contract during 1 year.
  • People still in employment highest score
    Luxembourg, Belgium and Portugal, lowest score
    Spain and Ireland
  • Transition unemployment paid work highest
    score Austria, Germany and Spain, lowest score
    Italy.
  • Transition inactive persons into paid employment
    highest score Denmark, lowest score Greece and
    Italy,

24
(2) Diversity of contractual and working time
arrangements
  • Proportion of part-time, fixedterm and
    self-employed workers
  • Highest score
  • The Netherlands (notably part-time work),
  • second Spain (notably fixed-term work).
  • Question of free choice!

25
(3) Transitions by type of contract
  • (not incl. new member states)
  • Largest share of workers that still have
    permanent contract after 1 year France and
    Luxembourg, lowest share Spain, Germany and
    Ireland
  • Transition from fixed-time work to permanent
    employment most smoothly in Luxembourg, Portugal
    and the UK
  • Transition from non-employed to permanent
    employed easiest in the Netherlands, UK and
    Denmark

26
We can have the cake and eat it too!
27
Preconditions for Flexicurity Strategies (1)
  • Platforms for
  • co-ordination
  • consultation
  • negotiation (at central and lower levels)
  • Role of social partnership and trust
  • (negotiated flexibility)
  • Extending the scope of collective bargaining
  • Acceptance of employment security rather than job
    security

28
Preconditions for Flexicurity Strategies (2)
  • Decentralisation of labour market policy
  • (co-ordinated decentralisation)
  • Need for certain architects
  • Sense of urgency and basic levels of flexibility
    and security
  • Favourable labour market conditions? Country
    size?

29
Preconditions of flexicurity (3)
  • Good practices appear not necessarily limited to
    one country or one cluster of countries
  • trade-offs may involve wide range of
    flexibility/security modalities
  • different actors at different levels may trigger
    flexicurity strategies, although the national
    government and social partners appear key players
    (law and collective agreements are the main
    vehicles)
  • Not one road towards flexicurity !

30
Flexicurity for all (1)?
  • In practice one European Social Model does not
    exist there are many social models
  • National social systems have clear geographical
    and institutional demarcations
  • Flexicurity systems achieve balance between
    interests of insiders and outsiders in labour
    market, but not for all outsiders?
  • International labour market mobility and its
    promotion (enlargement of EU, draft Service
    Directive) are feared to disrupt balance of
    existing flexicurity systems
  • Limits and
  • demarcations

31
Flexicurity for all (2)?
  • Niklas Luhmann in latest books inclusion can
    only be found when and where exclusion is
    possible
  • Presence of non-integratable groups represents a
    symbolic correlate for building up a social order
    and its preconditions
  • The domain of exclusion is highly integrated, but
    in a negative sense exclusion in one area
    correlates with exclusion in other areas

32
Flexicurity for all (3)?
  • Case of Denmark outstanding labour market
    performance, but low-ranking on integration of
    ethnic minorities in labour market. Combined
    with very strict asylum procedures and
    regulations. Golden triangle or iron trident?
  • Case of Netherlands much larger share of
    minorities, but position of some minorities fails
    to improve and complaints of discrimination and
    (recently) intolerance are mounting. Asylum
    policies now very strict and national and sector
    regulations in labour market to counteract
    social dumping and welfare tourism

33
Flexicurity for all (4)?
  • Flexicurity a highly exclusive party? Or are
    other, broader factors at play?
  • Just published report by Dutch Council of
    Economic Advisors negative attitude towards
    non-nationals hinders innovation.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com