
Patrick Emmenegger (ed.)
et al.
Published online:
24 May 2012
Published in print:
17 January 2012
Online ISBN:
9780199933488
Print ISBN:
9780199797899
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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A Typology of Responses to Labor Market Inequalities A Typology of Responses to Labor Market Inequalities
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Austria: Combating Social Divides in A Conservative Welfare State Austria: Combating Social Divides in A Conservative Welfare State
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The Grand Coalition: Balanced Reforms in the 1990s The Grand Coalition: Balanced Reforms in the 1990s
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Center-Right Coalition: Toward Supply-side Oriented Reforms Center-Right Coalition: Toward Supply-side Oriented Reforms
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Grand Coalition and Corporatism Reloaded Grand Coalition and Corporatism Reloaded
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Summary Summary
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New Zealand: Flexibility Rules New Zealand: Flexibility Rules
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The Early 1990s: Retrenchment and Liberalization The Early 1990s: Retrenchment and Liberalization
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Workfare Reforms Workfare Reforms
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Cautious Re-regulation since 1999 Cautious Re-regulation since 1999
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Summary Summary
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Sweden: Departing from The Encompassing Security Model? Sweden: Departing from The Encompassing Security Model?
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The 1990s: Benefit Cuts in a Period of Economic Crisis The 1990s: Benefit Cuts in a Period of Economic Crisis
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The Late 2000s: Maintaining the Welfare State—But Not for Outsiders? The Late 2000s: Maintaining the Welfare State—But Not for Outsiders?
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Summary Summary
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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References References
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Chapter
8 Responses to Labor Market Divides in Small States Since The 1990s
Get access
Pages
176–200
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Published:January 2012
Cite
Obinger, Herbert, Peter Starke, and Alexandra Kaasch, 'Responses to Labor Market Divides in Small States Since The 1990s', in Patrick Emmenegger, and others (eds), The Age of Dualization: The Changing Face of Inequality in Deindustrializing Societies, International Policy Exchange Series (2012; online edn, Oxford Academic, 24 May 2012), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199797899.003.0008, accessed 5 May 2025.
Abstract
In this chapter, Herbert Obinger, Peter Starke, and Alexandra Kaasch analyze various policy responses to labor market divides in three small open economies (Austria, New Zealand, and Sweden). They argue that different welfare state regimes generate distinctive patterns of insider-outsider divides and that the three countries developed quite different, albeit mainly path-dependent coping strategies. In other words, none of the three countries significantly departed from previous labor market policies in response to growing labor market inequalities.
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