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The economic crisis has revealed the dark side of deregulation in
the labour market: rising unemployment, limited access to social
security and, due to low wages, no savings to count upon in bad
times. This book casts light on the empirical relationship between
labour market deregulation through non-standard contracts and the
three main dimensions of worker security: employment, income and
social security. Focusing on individual work histories, it looks at
how labour market dynamics interact with the social protection
system in bringing about inequality and insecurity. In this context
Italy is put forward as the epitome of flexibility through
non-standard work and compared with three similar countries:
Germany, Spain and Japan. Results show that when flexibility is
carried out as a mere cost-reduction device and social security
only relies on insurance principles, deregulation leads to
insecurity. 'The political economy of work security and
flexibility' is essential reading for academics, students,
practitioners and policy makers interested in the outcomes of
labour market developments in advanced economies over the past
twenty years.
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