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The Flexibility Debate in Western Europe: The Current Drive to Restore Managements' Rights Over Personnel and Wages

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The Flexibility Debate in Western Europe: The Current Drive to Restore Managements' Rights Over Personnel and Wages
Abstract
Managements' drive for the removal of contractual and govemmental restraints on their control of the work force is rationalized in Western Europe as necessary to achieve greater internal and external competitiveness. In support of this view the OECD substituted the advocacy of a flexible manpower policy (including wage policy) under the euphorie title of 'positive adjustment policy' for the prior program of an active manpower policy promoted during the sixties and early seventies. The soundness of the arguments for this change in policy has been questioned by internal research findings as well as reports by consultants and special expert groups appointed by the organization. These studies call for a package of policies and measures negotiated between management and unions to realize the ultimate ends of manpower mobility and job security. The free labor market cannot by itself serve as the mechanism for realizing these goals. Employment security and not segmentation of the work force should be the objective of joint policy making.
Publication
Relations Industrielles / Industrial Relations
Volume
42
Issue
1
Pages
12-45
Date
1987
ISSN
0034-379X
Short Title
The Flexibility Debate in Western Europe
Citation
Barkin, S. (1987). The Flexibility Debate in Western Europe: The Current Drive to Restore Managements’ Rights Over Personnel and Wages. Relations Industrielles / Industrial Relations, 42(1), 12–45. http://www.erudit.org/revue/ri/1987/v42/n1/050283ar.html?vue=resume