
Since the 1970s early exit from work has become a major challenge in modern welfare states. Governments, employers, and unions alike once thought of early retirement as a peaceful solution to the economic problems of mass unemployment and industrial restructuring. Today governments and international organizations advocate the postponement of retirement and an increase in activity among older workers. Comparing the USA, eight European countries, and Japan, this book demonstrates significant cross-national differences in early retirement across countries and over time. The study evaluates the impact of major variations in welfare regimes, production systems, and labor relations. It stresses the importance of the 'pull factor' of extensive welfare state provisions, particularly in Continental Europe; the 'push factor' of labor shedding strategies by firms, particularly in Anglo-American market economies; and the role of employers and worker representatives in negotiating retirement policies, particularly in coordinated market economies. Over the last three decades, early retirement has become a popular social policy and employment practice in the workplace, adding to the fiscal crises and employment problems of today's welfare states. Attempts to reverse early retirement policies have led to major reform debates. Unilateral government policies to cut back on social benefits have not had the expected employment results due to resistance from employers, workers, and their organizations. Successful reforms require the cooperation of both sides. This study provides comprehensive empirical analysis and a balanced approach to studying both the pull and the push factors affecting early exit from work needed to understand the development of early retirement regimes.
This book investigates the structural and institutional factors that have driven early retirement trends across diverse welfare states and the subsequent challenges in reforming these systems. Bernhard Ebbinghaus, a scholar of comparative social policy, utilizes a cross-national comparative framework to analyze the interplay between government policy, corporate labor strategies, and union negotiations. The study argues that reversing early retirement requires moving beyond unilateral benefit cuts toward cooperative reform models that account for both the 'pull' of welfare provisions and the 'push' of corporate labor-shedding practices.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the comparative study of welfare states and labor market policy. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the rigor of the empirical analysis provided by the author.
Page Count:
352
Publication Date:
2006-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191564753
ISBN-13:
9780191564758
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