Flexible and secure labour market transitions: towards institutional capacity building in the digital economy

"Industry 4.0 and robots are said to speed up productivity thereby inducing a 'quantum leap' towards the 'end of work' and calling for a complete change of social security institutions that have so far been closely linked to employment. Unconditional basic income is the cry...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Schmid, Günther
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Bonn 2017
IZA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-621312444959-Flexible-and-secure-labour-mar.htm
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author Schmid, Günther
author_facet Schmid, Günther
collection Library items
description "Industry 4.0 and robots are said to speed up productivity thereby inducing a 'quantum leap' towards the 'end of work' and calling for a complete change of social security institutions that have so far been closely linked to employment. Unconditional basic income is the cry of the day, curiously advocated in particular by, for example, employers in high-tech industries and modern financial or distributive services. In the name of freedom, liberty and flexibility they suggest a form of security without any institutional complexity. The hidden agenda in the remaining empty institutional black box, however, is the dream of freedom from any bureaucracy and painstaking negotiations between competing interests or even getting rid of any responsibility to the new risks related to the digital revolution. This paper argues that the productivity leap promise of the digital economy is far from empirical evidence and that the proper answer to the new world of work are active securities, fair risk-sharing between employees, employers and the state and 'negotiated flexicurity' calling for a higher complexity of institutions corresponding to the increasing variability of employment relationships. The paper (1) starts with stylised facts about the new world of work with a focus on non-standard forms of employment in the EU28 member states and briefly explains the main determinants of this development. It (2) then proceeds with an analytical framework of the role of institutions and (3) applies this framework to develop suggestions of new security provisions to the main forms of non-standard employment. (4) The paper concludes by reflecting on the consequences for the prospective European Pillar of Social Rights."
format TEXT
geographic EU countries
id 621312444959_c0bdd8965df044c1b17e13f1d1c76d0f
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 621312444959_c0bdd8965df044c1b17e13f1d1c76d0f
is_hierarchy_title Flexible and secure labour market transitions: towards institutional capacity building in the digital economy
language English
physical 33 p.
Digital
publishDate 2017
publisher Bonn
IZA
spellingShingle Schmid, Günther
economic and social rights
labour market flexibility
labour productivity
precarious employment
social security
labour market policy
digitalisation
Flexible and secure labour market transitions: towards institutional capacity building in the digital economy
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=105129192330
title Flexible and secure labour market transitions: towards institutional capacity building in the digital economy
topic economic and social rights
labour market flexibility
labour productivity
precarious employment
social security
labour market policy
digitalisation
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-621312444959-Flexible-and-secure-labour-mar.htm