|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
The form and dynamic of wages and salaries are crucial to the
shaping of industrial societies. Wage relations are regulated by
states both to benefit their economies and to achieve a specific
form of freedom, equity and justice. Though there are signs of a
common dynamic, wage relations throughout Europe present a
bewildering diversity and wage bargaining at European level remains
virtually non-existent. Wages were recognised as an issue of
concern by the Social Charter but the European Union has shunned
direct interference. This book is intended to inform and intensify
debate on wage relations in Europe. It focuses on three aspects:
the state and the regulation of wages; wage forms, the reproduction
of labour and living standards; and competition, the market and
changes in work organisation. In papers and discussion by a range
of leading experts from eastern and western Europe, rehearsed
initially at a symposium supported by the European Commission,
entrenched orthodoxies are challenged and new approaches proposed.
Should social protection be integrated into the wage system? Are
wages best determined according to the quality, quantity or value
of the input or the output of labour? How do wage relations
reinforce inequalities and social divisions, especially gender
divisions, and exclude sections of society? Have flexibility in the
labour market and unregulated competition adversely affected firms'
productivity and the organization of work and pay? These and many
related questions are addressed in this wide-ranging and
provocative book - essential reading for all those concerned with
wage policies, whether politicians, academics, employers, trade
unions or those just interested'.
he debate on 'The Dynamics of Wage Relations in the New Europe' is
an T offspring of a research project on 'Disparities in Wage
Relations and the Reproduction of Skills in Europe'. At a meeting
of the advisory committee for this research held at the University
of Westminster in London on 14th November 1994, it was decided (by
Linda Clarke, ]orn]anssen, Henryk Lewandowski, Philippe Mehaut,
Patrick Rozenblatt and Frank Wilkinson) to set up a larger
international committee to develop a programme and seek funding
from the European Commission for a symposium of experts on wage
relations. This committee of ten scientific experts was formed and
invited to a number of meetings throughout 1995 and 1996 by DG V of
the European Commission in order to develop a programme and
proposal for a symposium to take place in 1997. Eventually the
proposal, formally submitted by University of Westminster/London,
University ofMaastrichti Netherlands, Fachhochschule
Dortmund/Germany and University of Osnabriick/ Germany was accepted
by the European Commission in May 1996. Additional funding was then
obtained from the Hans-Bockler-Stiftung and the Dutch Organisation
for Scientific Research allowing, in particular, participants from
Central and East European countries to be invited. The subject of
wage relations, as a central issue of European social policy, was
intended to be tackled in an open debate between scientists and
policy makers, the latter as individual experts rather than
representatives.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|