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The main concept underpinning the research
programme: the notion of transitional labour markets
Transitional labour markets are institutional arrangements that enable
individuals to move between different employment relationships in a coordinated
way while retaining an adequate level of social protection and to combine paid
and unpaid work as individual circumstances require. Transitional labour markets
provide protection not only against unemployment but also against the income and
employment risks associated with transitions. They not only provide protection
against the risks of such transitions but also offer incentives to take such
risks: moving from dependent employment to self-employment or from a full-time
to a part-time job, for example, or combining part-time work with training for a
new occupation. Transitional labour markets are institutional opportunity
structures that prevent unemployment, accelerate the transition from
unemployment to employment and enable individuals to plan their lives in
partnership with others. The extension of unemployment insurance, turning it
into a form of employment or working life insurance that insures or safeguards
individuals against all risks to their earnings (not just unemployment), reduces
those risks through preventive measures and increases their willingness to
accept flexible employment relationships. Thus, in combination with coordinated
wage, fiscal and monetary policies, the successful management of the risks
associated with transitions over the course of the working life is a central
element in the fight to prevent unemployment. In turn, a labour market in which
greater flexibility is combined with a reasonable level of social protection
increases employment intensity, reduces inflationary wage pressures and thereby
contributes to economic growth.
The starting point for the unit’s theoretical approach is the
complementary strengths and weaknesses of the institutions and instruments of
social and economic governance: markets, hierarchies, networks and citizens’
rights. The aim is to develop a modern theory of governance that combines
rational choice theory with the theory of social institutions. This means that
institutional path dependencies (long-term obligations created by investments),
social norms (such as reciprocity and fairness), power (the ability not to have
to learn) and political objectives (e.g. equality of opportunity) have to be
explicitly taken into account in research designs and explanatory models.
The unit’s methodological and empirical concerns are focused on
analysis of the transitions between various forms of economic activity and
inactivity and between various forms of employment dependent on welfare state
arrangements. In addition to international, national and regional aggregate data,
therefore, increasing use is being made of individual process data (panel data)
for the longitudinal analysis of transitional events. The unit’s approach to
implementation and evaluation research encompasses qualitative case studies,
benchmarking based on a comprehensive regional data bank for Germany,
cost-benefit analyses for individual and institutional actors and
micro-sociological and micro-economic causal models. |
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