This article contributes to the debate on employer preferences. It challenges varieties of capitalism’s argument that manufacturing employers in Coordinated Market Economies (CMEs) will tend to defend non-liberal institutions because of the comparative institutional advantage that they provide. It examines Germany and Sweden, two critical cases in this debate. It is based on interviews with key officials and an in-depth examination of the Initiative Neue Soziale Marktwirtschaft (INSM) and Timbro, think-tanks sponsored by German and Swedish employers to shape public opinion. In line with power resource theory, I find that both German and Swedish employers have a strong preference for liberalization. In both cases, they responded to left-wing...
Defence date: 12 June 2009Examining Board: Colin Crouch (Warwick Business School), Anke Hassel (Hert...
This book assesses the role of employers in the development of welfare state and labour market insti...
This article addresses the apparent paradox of simultaneous neoliberal change and welfare-statist, c...
This article contributes to the debate on employer preferences. It challenges varieties of capitalis...
Do employers in coordinated market economies (CME’s) actively defend the non-liberal, market- constr...
Over the past decades, capitalist democracies across the OECD have transitioned from manufacturing t...
Faced with a declining workforce, why does the Swedish Social Democratic Party (SAP) oppose employer...
In recent years, employer-centered explanations of welfare state development have begun to challenge...
Published online 18 July 2013.In recent years, employer-centered explanations of welfare state devel...
Over the past decades, capitalist democracies across the OECD have transitioned from manufacturing t...
Defence date: 15 March 2011Examining Board: Prof. Donatella Della Porta, European University Institu...
This book examines contemporary changes in labor market institutions in the United States, Germany, ...
This Master’s thesis examines the interesting paradox of why employee ownership is morecommon in the...
Employer organizations have been presented as strong promoters of the liberalization of industrial r...
This paper makes two interrelated arguments. First, based on case studies of Sweden and Germany, it ...
Defence date: 12 June 2009Examining Board: Colin Crouch (Warwick Business School), Anke Hassel (Hert...
This book assesses the role of employers in the development of welfare state and labour market insti...
This article addresses the apparent paradox of simultaneous neoliberal change and welfare-statist, c...
This article contributes to the debate on employer preferences. It challenges varieties of capitalis...
Do employers in coordinated market economies (CME’s) actively defend the non-liberal, market- constr...
Over the past decades, capitalist democracies across the OECD have transitioned from manufacturing t...
Faced with a declining workforce, why does the Swedish Social Democratic Party (SAP) oppose employer...
In recent years, employer-centered explanations of welfare state development have begun to challenge...
Published online 18 July 2013.In recent years, employer-centered explanations of welfare state devel...
Over the past decades, capitalist democracies across the OECD have transitioned from manufacturing t...
Defence date: 15 March 2011Examining Board: Prof. Donatella Della Porta, European University Institu...
This book examines contemporary changes in labor market institutions in the United States, Germany, ...
This Master’s thesis examines the interesting paradox of why employee ownership is morecommon in the...
Employer organizations have been presented as strong promoters of the liberalization of industrial r...
This paper makes two interrelated arguments. First, based on case studies of Sweden and Germany, it ...
Defence date: 12 June 2009Examining Board: Colin Crouch (Warwick Business School), Anke Hassel (Hert...
This book assesses the role of employers in the development of welfare state and labour market insti...
This article addresses the apparent paradox of simultaneous neoliberal change and welfare-statist, c...