dc.contributor.author | Vulkan, Patrik | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2016-01-21T12:34:44Z | |
dc.date.available | 2016-01-21T12:34:44Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2016-01-21 | |
dc.identifier.isbn | 978-91-87876-08-0 | |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/2077/41381 | |
dc.description.abstract | This thesis examines the microfoundations of flexicurity, an arrangement of policies that proponents claim can
deliver a ‘win-win’ situation in the labour market. These policies include lax employment protection legislation
(EPL) to provide employers the flexibility to hire and fire with ease, and others supposed to provide employees
with a high level of ‘employment security’ (high ability to find new quality jobs if they lose their current job) and
‘income security’ (low likelihood of suffering economically during periods of transition between jobs). More
specifically, this thesis analyses how flexicurity may affect employees’ well-being and to what extent they favour
flexicurity policy proposals in Sweden and (to lesser degrees) other Nordic countries, using data obtained from
responses to a questionnaire concerning security in the labour market distributed to employees, with additional
data from the Labour Force Survey.
The theoretical framework applied relates flexicurity theory to the two central concepts of flexibility and
security, and the need for institutional arrangements that compensate for losses of job security (caused by
weakening of EPL) in the labour market. Furthermore, it includes a multidimensional understanding of security
and its relation to well-being, as well as ways in which class and insider-outsider divisions may structure
employees’ attitudes to labour market policy and the main components of the flexicurity arrangement
Empirically, the thesis is based on four studies, designated Studies I-IV. Study I examines to what extent
increases in employment and income security could compensate for losses of job security among employees, as
envisioned in the flexicurity arrangement. Study II elaborates on this theme by examining the relation between
job insecurity and poor well-being, and the degree to which losses of well-being can be countered by increases in
employment and income security, using a multidimensional measure of employees’ security in Sweden, Finland
and Norway. Study III examines employee attitudes to deregulating EPL, a central component of flexicurity, in
the Nordic welfare states and whether labour market outsiders are more in favour than insiders of deregulation.
Study IV explores employees’ support for the policy measures comprising the main flexicurity components, and
to what extent class and insider/outsider divisions in Sweden affect this support.
The main findings are that job insecurity exacerbates employees’ worries about job losses, and that the
worries are related to both employment and income security. High employment security is associated with low
levels of worries about job losses, indicating that improvements in possibilities of finding a new job can
compensate for increases in job insecurity. However, the level of job insecurity affects these worries most
strongly (of the tested variables), thus improving job security could be considered the most effective measure for
improving employees’ mental well-being. A labour market that prioritizes provision of employment and income
security could, under favourable conditions, be better for employees than an arrangement that primarily
prioritizes job security. However, the success of the flexicurity arrangement seems highly susceptible to economic
down-turns, since the effectiveness of the active labour market programmes it requires is heavily reliant on
market forces. The likely loss of employment security during a recession would be clearly detrimental to
employees’ well-being. Relatively high proportions of employees favour deregulation of EPL in Sweden to allow
employers more flexibility. However, the support decreases when the deregulation is associated with lower job
security for employees. There is little support for the notion that outsiders would be more in favour of
deregulation. In fact, there are indications of the opposite tendency, that outsiders are more in favour of strict EPL
than insiders, contrary to a central tenet of insider/outsider theory. Concerning attitudes to all three main
flexicurity components, there is little coherent support for policy changes in line with flexicurity. Employee
preferences are rather oriented towards either interventionist or neoliberal measures in the labour market, which
to a large part can be explained by class position, since interventionist and neoliberal policy preferences are
readily structured along class divisions. These results are problematic with regard to implementation of
flexicurity, since wide support for the arrangement is considered important for its success. Insider/outsider
divisions seem to have fairly small, or theoretically contradictory, effects on policy preferences. | sv |
dc.language.iso | eng | sv |
dc.relation.haspart | Berglund T, Furåker F and Vulkan P (2014) Is job insecurity compensated for
by employment and income security? Economic and Industrial Democracy 35(1): 165-184. ::doi::10.1177/0143831X12468904 | sv |
dc.relation.haspart | Vulkan P, Saloniemi A, Svalund J and Väisänen A (2015) Job insecurity and
mental well-being in Finland, Norway, and Sweden. Consequences of flexicurity
in a Nordic welfare setting. Nordic journal of working life studies 5(2): 33-53. | sv |
dc.relation.haspart | Svalund J, Saloniemi A and Vulkan P (2016) Attitudes towards job protection
legislation: Comparing insiders and outsiders in Finland, Norway and
Sweden. European Journal of Industrial Relations. Prepublished January, 2016. ::doi::10.1177/0959680115626057. | sv |
dc.relation.haspart | Vulkan P (submitted) Employee support for the flexicurity arrangement as
labour market policy. Unpublished manuscript. | sv |
dc.subject | Flexicurity | sv |
dc.subject | job insecurity | sv |
dc.subject | mental well-being | sv |
dc.subject | mentemployment security | sv |
dc.subject | income security | sv |
dc.subject | cognitive and affective insecurity | sv |
dc.subject | insider/outsider divide | sv |
dc.subject | labour market policy | sv |
dc.subject | labour market paradigms | sv |
dc.subject | policy preferences | sv |
dc.title | The Microfundations of Flexicurity | sv |
dc.title.alternative | Employees’ well-being and attitudes to labour market policy in a Swedish and Nordic welfare state setting | sv |
dc.type | Text | |
dc.type.svep | Doctoral thesis | eng |
dc.gup.mail | patrik.vulkan@gu.se | sv |
dc.type.degree | Doctor of Philosophy | sv |
dc.gup.origin | Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten | swe |
dc.gup.origin | University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences | eng |
dc.gup.department | Department of Sociology and Work Science ; Institutionen för sociologi och arbetsvetenskap | sv |
dc.gup.defenceplace | Fredagen den 12 februari 2016, kl 13.15, Hörsalen Sappören, Sprängkullsgatan 25 | sv |
dc.gup.defencedate | 2016-02-12 | |