This article looks at two related labour market policies that have persisted and even proliferated across Europe both before and after the financial crisis: wage restraint and punitive workfare programmes. It asks why these policies, despite their weak empirical records, have been so durable. Moving beyond comparative-institutionalist explanations which emphasise institutional stickiness, it draws on Marxist and Kaleckian ideas around the concept of ‘class discipline’. It argues that under financialisation, the need for states to implement policies that discipline the working class is intensified, even if these policies do little to enable (and may even counteract) future stability. Wage restraint and punitive active labour market policies ...
The financial crisis drew attention to the way in which workers in certain countries had been able t...
The year 2009 was marked by a deep global economic crisis triggered by turbulence on the financial m...
The article argues that, in the last three decades, states have become more preoccupied with, and in...
This paper looks at two related labour market policies that have persisted and even proliferated acr...
This paper relates the financial and monetary dimensions of the contemporary economic crisis to work...
The increase in labour precarity which has accompanied the global economic and financial crisis is i...
This article reviews the recommodification of social policy in the context of financialised austerit...
Modern capitalist economies usually require some kind of compromise between capital's twin needs for...
Can workers still fight for wage increases and the protection of their rights during times of econom...
This chapter focuses on labour market policies in the European Union in the aftermath of the Great R...
This paper establishes a link between international differences in the organisation of work and mode...
The aim of this article is to advance the politico-economic analysis of punishment in contexts of cr...
International audienceThe period before the crisis was characterised by a big push for labour market...
For the past decade the European Commission has urged EU member states to pursue ‘flexicurity’ polic...
Labour market flexibilization has been at the heart of the ‘extended relaunch’ of European integrati...
The financial crisis drew attention to the way in which workers in certain countries had been able t...
The year 2009 was marked by a deep global economic crisis triggered by turbulence on the financial m...
The article argues that, in the last three decades, states have become more preoccupied with, and in...
This paper looks at two related labour market policies that have persisted and even proliferated acr...
This paper relates the financial and monetary dimensions of the contemporary economic crisis to work...
The increase in labour precarity which has accompanied the global economic and financial crisis is i...
This article reviews the recommodification of social policy in the context of financialised austerit...
Modern capitalist economies usually require some kind of compromise between capital's twin needs for...
Can workers still fight for wage increases and the protection of their rights during times of econom...
This chapter focuses on labour market policies in the European Union in the aftermath of the Great R...
This paper establishes a link between international differences in the organisation of work and mode...
The aim of this article is to advance the politico-economic analysis of punishment in contexts of cr...
International audienceThe period before the crisis was characterised by a big push for labour market...
For the past decade the European Commission has urged EU member states to pursue ‘flexicurity’ polic...
Labour market flexibilization has been at the heart of the ‘extended relaunch’ of European integrati...
The financial crisis drew attention to the way in which workers in certain countries had been able t...
The year 2009 was marked by a deep global economic crisis triggered by turbulence on the financial m...
The article argues that, in the last three decades, states have become more preoccupied with, and in...