Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Globalization and Policy Concertation Essay -- Global Economics Global
Introduction    My argument in this paper is that globalization is not leading to a decline in the incidence of  policy concertation in Western Europe between governments, employers and trade unions,  contrary to much accepted wisdom, and that this persistence of policy concertation can be best  understood in terms of a configurational model of policy concertation in which the main  variables are perceived problems, the degree of agreement on economic policy among the  relevant political actors, and the perceived implementation capacity of these actors.  I take my definition of ââ¬Ëglobalisationââ¬â¢ from that devised by David Held and his colleagues:  A process (or set of processes) which embodies a transformation in the spatial  organisation of social relations and transactions ââ¬â assessed in terms of their  extensity, intensity, velocity and impact ââ¬â generating transcontinental or  interregional flows and networks of activity, interaction and the exercise of power  (Held et al 1999: 16).  I focus in particular on economic globalisation, namely the increase in worldwide trade, the  globalisation of financial markets and capital movements, and the multinationalisation of  production.  By ââ¬Ëpolicy concertationââ¬â¢ is meant the making of public policy by means of national-level, intersectoral  negotiations leading to agreements ââ¬â as opposed to non-binding discussions - between  government representatives and representatives of peak employer and/or trade union  confederations about the formation of government policies. This phenomenon is sometimes  referred to as ââ¬Ëcorporatismââ¬â¢, but the term ââ¬Ëpolicy concertationââ¬â¢ is preferred for the sake of clarity  because the term ââ¬Ëcorporatismââ¬â¢ is also used to describe other types of phenomena: Schmitterââ¬â¢s  o...              ...  Traxler, Franz (1995a), ââ¬ËFarewell to Labour Market Associations? Organized Versus  Disorganized Decentralization as a Map for Industrial Relationsââ¬â¢, pp.3-19 in: Colin Crouch and  Franz Traxler (eds.), Organized Industrial Relations in Europe: What Future? Aldershot:  Avebury.  Traxler, Franz (1997), ââ¬ËThe Logic of Social Pactsââ¬â¢, in Social Pacts in Europe, ed. Giuseppe  Fajertag and Philippe Pochet. Brussels: ETUI.  Treu, Tiziano (1992). ââ¬ËTripartite Social Policy-Making: An Overviewââ¬â¢, pp.1-25 in: Tiziano Treu  (ed.), Participation in Public Policy-Making: The Role of Trade Unions and Employersââ¬â¢  Associations. Berlin and New York: Walter de Gruyter.  Wallerstein, Michael, Miriam Golden and Peter Lange (1997), ââ¬ËUnions, Employersââ¬â¢  Associations, and Wage-Setting Institutions in Northern and Central Europe, 1950-1992ââ¬â¢,  Industrial and Labor Relations Review 50(3): 379-401.                      
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