Dr Neil Lee
n.d.lee@lse.ac.uk
@ndrlee
Margarida Madaleno M.Madaleno@lse.ac.uk
Neil Lee
n.d.lee@lse.ac.uk
Structure of the course:
Theory
Varieties of European Capitalism
European labour markets
Equity vs. efficiency?
Poverty & inequality
The future of work
Migration
Labour migration
Diversity, xenophobia and populism
Future challenges
The ageing society
Inter-generational equity
Populism and the future of Europe
GDP per capita = 122% of EU Average (2017)
GDP per capita = 63% of EU Average (2017)
Population: 82,850,000 (2018)
Population: 475,700
(2018)
Today's lecture = option 2
1. Esping-Andersen: Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism
2. Hall & Soskice: Varieties of Capitalism
3. Sapir: European Social Models
Published in 1990 (based on data from the 1980s)
The state was changing: from functional (military, services) to regulatory / redistributive
This meant the state was increasingly shaping society
Three diverse 'regime types' - each with its own logic of organisation, stratification and social integration
De-commodification
The degree to which social service is a right / the degree to which a person can live without reliance on the market
Social stratification
Extent to which social stratification is promoted by social policy > does the welfare state broaden or narrow solidarities?
Characterised by:
Means testing
Modest transfers
Liberal work ethic
Only those on v. low incomes are state dependent
Welfare is determined by the market, with equality of poverty at the bottom
Characterised by:
No liberal obsession with efficiency / commodification
Negligible redistribution
“Familyhood” seen as important – social insurance excludes non-working
Benefits encourage mothers to stay at home / childcare is underrepresented
Text
Corporatist countries: Germany, France, Austria, Italy
Characterised by:
–Equality of the highest standards
–Services benefits upgraded to ensure all have higher standards
–Decommodified
–Crowds out market provision
Liberal | Corporatist | Social democratic |
---|---|---|
Lowdecommodification | Moderate decommodification |
High decommodification |
Individualism & the market | State benefits related to occupational status | Generous universal benefits, with no individual contribution |
Little redistribution | Subsidiarity (state intervenes only after family) | Crowds out market provision |
Mixed cases – countries take elements of different types
Inadequate treatment of gender (Crouch 2008)
Not comprehensive (some countries ignored)
Now dated?
“welfare states cluster, but we must recognize that there is no single pure case. The Scandinavian countries may be predominantly social democratic, but they are not free of crucial Liberal elements. Neither are the Liberal regimes pure types. The American social-security system is redistributive, compulsory and far from actuarial. At least in its early formulation, the New Deal was as social democratic as was contemporary Scandinavian social democracy. And European conservative regimes have incorporated both Liberal and social democratic impulses. Over the decades, they have become less corporatist and less authoritarian”
The defence from Esping-Andersen (1990: 28-29)
Relational view of the firm
Firms need to overcome coordination problems
Industrial relations - coordination of wage bargaining / working conditions
Vocational training / education - firms need skills, workers need to know skills to acquire
Corporate governance - firms seek finance, investors seek returns on capital
Inter-firm relations - stable demand with stable supplies
Employees - making sure they cooperate with each other and have the competencies they need
“Following North (1990: 3), we define institutions as a set of rules, formal or informal, that actors generally follow, whether for normative, cognitive, or material reasons, and organisations as durable entities with formally recognized members, whose rules also contribute to the institutions of the political economy”
•
Hall and Soskice, 2009: 28
Liberal market economies - Market coordination
Coordinated market economies - Institutional coordination
Coordination via hierarchies / competitive markets
Arms-length exchange of goods / services
Formal contracts
Non-market relationships
Relational or incomplete contraction
Network monitoring based on private information
Strategic interaction, not market outcomes
Liberal market economies - Market coordination
Coordinated market economies - Institutional coordination
United States
United Kingdom
Australia
Canada
Ireland
Germany
Japan
Switzerland
Netherlands
Belgium
Sweden
Norway
Denmark
Finland
Ambigous /
missing
France
Italy
Spain
Portugal
GreeceTurkey
Next week:
Theory
Varieties of European Capitalism
European labour markets
Equity vs. efficiency?
Poverty & inequality
The future of work
Migration
Labour migration
Diversity, xenophobia and populism
Future challenges
The ageing society
Inter-generational equity
Populism and the future of Europe
A key question:
In the context of globalisation, can we afford nice European social models?
Andre Sapir's typology helps us think about this question
You should (critically) read his paper before the lecture: