2011
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.1806922
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What’s Left to Trade: The Changing Logic of Corporatist Policymaking in Europe

Abstract: This paper outlines evolutions in the underlying logic of corporatist policymaking in Western Europe. Starting from the discrepancy between the observable decline in the power of organised labour on the one hand, and the persistence of corporatist concertation as a mode of policymaking on the other, the paper outlines the remaining incentives for governments to involve trade unions and employers in policymaking. The paper shifts the focus from the traditional structural explanations of corporatist policymaking… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
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“…Globalization, however, is seen as to have undermined the welfare state, as well as labour representation (Afonso, 2011). As a consequence, concomitant to the appearance of newly organized pressure groups and new arenas of interest intermediation, globalization pushed for a reconfiguration of the previous channels of intermediation .…”
Section: Corporatism/neo-corporatismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Globalization, however, is seen as to have undermined the welfare state, as well as labour representation (Afonso, 2011). As a consequence, concomitant to the appearance of newly organized pressure groups and new arenas of interest intermediation, globalization pushed for a reconfiguration of the previous channels of intermediation .…”
Section: Corporatism/neo-corporatismmentioning
confidence: 99%