2011
DOI: 10.1177/0018726710396246
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National institutions and employers’ age management practices in Britain and Germany: ‘Path dependence’ and option exploration

Abstract: We pursue a comparative analysis of employers' age management practices in Britain and Germany, asking how valid 'convergence' and 'Varieties of Capitalism' theories are. After rejecting the convergence verdict, we proceed to ask how far 'path dependence' helps explain inter-country differences. Through 19 interviews with British and German experts, we find that firms have reacted in different ways to promptings from the EU and the two states. Change has been modest and a rhetoric-reality gap exists in firms a… Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…Apart from showing clear distinctions between countries on HRM, studies from this project, and from other sources, have identified clear differences between countries: in responses to the ageing workforce in the UK and Germany (Müller-Camen, Croucher, Flynn & Schröder, 2011); in the professionalism of the HRM function between the UK and other European Countries (Farndale, 2005), in compensation practices in ten countries across three continents (Lowe, Milliman, De Cieri, & Dowling, 2002), related differences in financial participation (Pendeleton, Poutsma, Ligthart, & Brewster, 2013), differences in training (Goergen, Brewster, Wood, & Wilkinson, 2012), management development systems across Europe (Mabey & Ramirez, 2004), employee turnover in the USA and nine European countries (Croucher, Wood, Brewster, & Brookes, 2012), and downsizing in 16 different countries (Goergen, Brewster, & Wood, 2013). …”
Section: The Role Of Contextmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Apart from showing clear distinctions between countries on HRM, studies from this project, and from other sources, have identified clear differences between countries: in responses to the ageing workforce in the UK and Germany (Müller-Camen, Croucher, Flynn & Schröder, 2011); in the professionalism of the HRM function between the UK and other European Countries (Farndale, 2005), in compensation practices in ten countries across three continents (Lowe, Milliman, De Cieri, & Dowling, 2002), related differences in financial participation (Pendeleton, Poutsma, Ligthart, & Brewster, 2013), differences in training (Goergen, Brewster, Wood, & Wilkinson, 2012), management development systems across Europe (Mabey & Ramirez, 2004), employee turnover in the USA and nine European countries (Croucher, Wood, Brewster, & Brookes, 2012), and downsizing in 16 different countries (Goergen, Brewster, & Wood, 2013). …”
Section: The Role Of Contextmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…At the time of data collection in 2008−2009, early retirement options were already being dismantled; the abolishment of the Partial Retirement Act (Altersteilzeitgesetz) as well as the increased State Pension Age were still debated but predominantly seen as given. Several socio-political activation measures had also been taken (Muller-Camen et al, 2011).…”
Section: Data Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, steel companies are faced with a rapidly ageing workforce. This is exacerbated by the phasing out of state subsidies for early retirement, and explains why in 2006 employers agreed to trade union demands for a collective bargaining agreement on demographic change (Muller-Camen et al, 2011).…”
Section: Case Study Sectors: Steel and Retailmentioning
confidence: 99%