Labour Market Segmentation, Regulation of Non-Standard Employment, and the Influence of the EU
Abstract
In wake of the 1970s energy crisis, labour markets in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries changed considerably: deindustrialisation, low economic growth, and high structural unemployment challenged the standard employment relationship (SER), and a flexibilisation of employment was promoted. Tertiarisation and increasing female labour market participation fuelled the spread of non-standard forms of employment (NSER) such as part-time and temporary work. Since the 1990s, EU member countries aligned their NSER regulation to that of the SER, while in other OECD countries, NSERs remained un(der)regulated. The chapter illustrates the transformation of labour markets and the development of NSER regulation for selected countries, relying on national Labour Force Surveys and the Cambridge Labour Regulation Index. It tells the story of how membership in a supranational organisation has shaped national labour legislation.
Quellen
Dingeldey, Irene und Jean-Yves Gerlitz. 2022. Labour Market Segmentation, Regulation of Non-Standard Employment, and the Influence of the EU. In: International Impacts on Social Policy, hg. von Frank Nullmeier, Delia González De Reufels und Herbert Obinger, 247–260. Global Dynamics of Social Policy. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-86645-7_20.