The first part-time economy in the world. Does it work?

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2008
Series AIAS working paper, 08-67
Number of pages 59
Publisher Amsterdam: Amsterdam Institute for Advanced labour Studies, University of Amsterdam
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Labour Studies (AIAS)
Abstract
_*This paper is republished from the first edition in 2000.*_ h2. Introduction In his Adam Smith lecture of the European Association of Labour Economists, Harvard economist Richard Freeman has defined the Netherlands as ‘the only part-time economy of the world, with a finger in the dike of unemployment’ (Freeman 1998: 2). How did it happen? What kind of jobs are these and whose jobs are they? Can a ‘one-and-a-half job’ model work? Is it a solution to Europe’s predicament of unemployment? These are the questions that I will try to answer in this paper. The paper begins with a brief description of the main changes in the Dutch labour market during the past decades. It shows that there was a major reversal of trends on nearly all performance indicators in the early 1 980s. Next, I discuss the role of wage moderation, sectoral change and job redistribution. In section three I shall focus in particular on the role of atypical and part-time employment. Section four concentrates on policies and changes in labour market behaviour and preferences, in particular of (married) women, trade unions, employers and governments. In the concluding part I shall identify some problems associated with the one-and-a-half job model and try to answer the central evaluative questions and title of the paper.
Document type Working paper
Note August 2008. - Publ. before as AIAS working paper 00-01 (2000)
Language English
Published at http://www.uva-aias.net/publications/show/1179
Downloads
WP67.pdf (Final published version)
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