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ID102570
Title ProperConditional contraction
Other Title Informationglobalisation and capitalist systems
LanguageENG
AuthorJensen, Carsten
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The effect of globalisation on social spending is one of the most intensely studied issues in the political economy literature. Until recently, conventional wisdom held that globalisation leads governments to expand social spending to compensate workers for increasing risk exposure. The latest research shows, however, that globalisation has become strongly associated with spending cutbacks since the late 1980s. This article adds to this research by arguing that the negative impact of globalisation is conditioned on the capitalist system in different countries. In coordinated market economies (CMEs), employers are dependent on the willingness of the workforce to invest in specific skills and therefore become supportive of extensive social spending. Not so in liberal market economies (LMEs), where employers are much less dependent on social spending because the workforce in general invests less in specific skills. Employers in LMEs are therefore likely to use increasing globalisation as a means to push through retrenchment, whereas employers in CMEs are not. This argument is tested in a time-series cross-section regression analysis, which clearly supports it.
`In' analytical NoteEuropean Journal of Political Research Vol. 50, No. 2; Mar 2011: p.168-189
Journal SourceEuropean Journal of Political Research Vol. 50, No. 2; Mar 2011: p.168-189
Key WordsConditional Contraction ;  Globalisation ;  Capitalist Systems ;  Liberal Market Economies