ABSTRACT
This collection of country studies explores changing relationships between the state, employers and labour in an increasingly internationalized world economy. It covers ten countries and examines the tensions and contradictions caused by neo-liberal market agendas. The authors express concern at the potentially ravaging effects of market deregulation on organized labour and present a critical account of state efforts to emulate desired models of national economic development. While the central core of the book concerns itself with changing labour relations, this is placed within the wider context of state and employer strategy, and covers issues such as labour market segmentation, welfare and taxation regimes and varying approaches to corporatism.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part ONE|55 pages
'Globalization' and the Limits of Reform
part TWO|84 pages
Advanced Industrial Nations
part THREE|87 pages
Economies in Transformation
part FOUR|74 pages
The Search for Modernity?