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The State and Corporatist Adjustment: Germany and the Netherlands.

Authors :
Hemerijck, Anton C.
Vail, Mark I.
Source :
Conference Papers -- American Political Science Association. 2003 Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, p1-55. 56p.
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

This paper explores varieties of state intervention in corporatist political economies. Focusing on recent reforms in social policy, labor-market policy, and wage policies in Germany and the Netherlands, it suggests that the neglect of the role of the state in corporatist systems has led to a failure to capture important dimensions of how they adjust to shifting political, economic, and social challenges. Furthermore, it argues that the state’s role in promoting needed institutional and policy reforms has been particularly important during the contemporary period of fiscal austerity, slow growth, and intense pressures on inherited policy arrangements. In some policy areas, the Dutch and German states have worked within existing corporatist frameworks, while, in others, they have suspended, by-passed, or even dismantled them in order to secure urgently needed reforms. The paper concludes that the character of state intervention not only varies with the challenges posed by particular policy areas, it has also been shaped in important ways by the national institutional frameworks within which corporatist institutions are embedded. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Conference Papers -- American Political Science Association
Publication Type :
Conference
Accession number :
16023664
Full Text :
https://doi.org/apsa_proceeding_1189.PDF