Publication | Closed Access
Flexibility bites back: the multiple and hidden costs of flexible employment policies
116
Citations
23
References
2016
Year
Hidden CostsLabor Market ParticipationEducationFlexible Labour MarketsEmployee FlexibilityHuman Resource ManagementIndustrial OrganizationWork AdjustmentFlexible Work ArrangementLabor Process StudiesManagementPublic PolicyEconomicsEmploymentFlexible Employment PoliciesRegulationLabor Force TrendLabor Market OutcomeLabour SupplyLabor MarketLabor EconomicsEconomic PolicyWorkforce DevelopmentPublic EconomicsBusinessLabour MarketLabor Market ImpactWorkforce DiversityPersonnel EconomicsUnemployment
Flexible labour markets are increasingly regarded as the answer to a wide spectrum of labour market and societal challenges from creating jobs to reducing segmentation and welfare dependency, improving public finances and supporting workforce diversity and innovation. The contention is that, contrary to these claims, flexible labour markets generate fundamental contradictions and unsustainable long‐term trends. The jobs miracle is exaggerated and based on low productivity jobs, outsiders often lose most from competition, claimants must work flexibly but still secure a full‐time wage, low‐wage employment is shrinking the fiscal base, jobs are not being adjusted to accommodate workers' changing needs and capacities and the disposable labour model is undermining long‐term productivity.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1