Denmark and Sweden: The Consequences of Public Service Reform and Economic Crisis for Public Service Employment Relations

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Denmark and Sweden : The Consequences of Public Service Reform and Economic Crisis for Public Service Employment Relations. / Mailand, Mikkel; Hansen, Nana Wesley.

Public Service Management and Employment Relations in Europe. Emerging from the Crisis. red. / Stephen Bach; Lorenzo Bordogna. New York : Routledge, 2016. s. 218-243 (Routledge Critical Studies in Public Management).

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Mailand, M & Hansen, NW 2016, Denmark and Sweden: The Consequences of Public Service Reform and Economic Crisis for Public Service Employment Relations. i S Bach & L Bordogna (red), Public Service Management and Employment Relations in Europe. Emerging from the Crisis. Routledge, New York, Routledge Critical Studies in Public Management, s. 218-243.

APA

Mailand, M., & Hansen, N. W. (2016). Denmark and Sweden: The Consequences of Public Service Reform and Economic Crisis for Public Service Employment Relations. I S. Bach, & L. Bordogna (red.), Public Service Management and Employment Relations in Europe. Emerging from the Crisis (s. 218-243). Routledge. Routledge Critical Studies in Public Management

Vancouver

Mailand M, Hansen NW. Denmark and Sweden: The Consequences of Public Service Reform and Economic Crisis for Public Service Employment Relations. I Bach S, Bordogna L, red., Public Service Management and Employment Relations in Europe. Emerging from the Crisis. New York: Routledge. 2016. s. 218-243. (Routledge Critical Studies in Public Management).

Author

Mailand, Mikkel ; Hansen, Nana Wesley. / Denmark and Sweden : The Consequences of Public Service Reform and Economic Crisis for Public Service Employment Relations. Public Service Management and Employment Relations in Europe. Emerging from the Crisis. red. / Stephen Bach ; Lorenzo Bordogna. New York : Routledge, 2016. s. 218-243 (Routledge Critical Studies in Public Management).

Bibtex

@inbook{e3769e3d3a0a48c3ad95f74d449dd18d,
title = "Denmark and Sweden: The Consequences of Public Service Reform and Economic Crisis for Public Service Employment Relations",
abstract = "Denmark and Sweden have some of the largest public sectors in Europe. They are also characterized by predominantly voluntaristic labor market models where collective bargaining and employee involvement play a relatively strong role in public sector employment relations (ER). In this chapter, we analyze similarities and differences between the two countries regarding their public sectors and their public sector ER. The analysis focuses on three themes: main public services reforms and New Public Management (NPM), changes in the ER and job levels and the relationship between parliamentary politics and ER. Finally, a multiple austerity typology proposed by Lodge and Hood (2012) is applied to the two Scandinavian cases. We argue that although employment levels remain high, and the public sector ER systems are still basically voluntaristic, changes have been seen in ER models. These changes have been more profound in Sweden than in Denmark, but they took place before the 2008 crisis. In Sweden, an economic crisis in the 1990s was a much more important driver than the post- 2008 crisis. The 1990s crisis contributed to an earlier implementation of NPM and to a higher degree of decentralization of public sector wage setting than in Denmark. It is furthermore argued that post-2008 austerity policies have been relatively mild in the two countries and cannot alone explain recent changes.",
author = "Mikkel Mailand and Hansen, {Nana Wesley}",
year = "2016",
language = "English",
series = "Routledge Critical Studies in Public Management",
publisher = "Routledge",
pages = "218--243",
editor = "Stephen Bach and Lorenzo Bordogna",
booktitle = "Public Service Management and Employment Relations in Europe. Emerging from the Crisis",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Denmark and Sweden

T2 - The Consequences of Public Service Reform and Economic Crisis for Public Service Employment Relations

AU - Mailand, Mikkel

AU - Hansen, Nana Wesley

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Denmark and Sweden have some of the largest public sectors in Europe. They are also characterized by predominantly voluntaristic labor market models where collective bargaining and employee involvement play a relatively strong role in public sector employment relations (ER). In this chapter, we analyze similarities and differences between the two countries regarding their public sectors and their public sector ER. The analysis focuses on three themes: main public services reforms and New Public Management (NPM), changes in the ER and job levels and the relationship between parliamentary politics and ER. Finally, a multiple austerity typology proposed by Lodge and Hood (2012) is applied to the two Scandinavian cases. We argue that although employment levels remain high, and the public sector ER systems are still basically voluntaristic, changes have been seen in ER models. These changes have been more profound in Sweden than in Denmark, but they took place before the 2008 crisis. In Sweden, an economic crisis in the 1990s was a much more important driver than the post- 2008 crisis. The 1990s crisis contributed to an earlier implementation of NPM and to a higher degree of decentralization of public sector wage setting than in Denmark. It is furthermore argued that post-2008 austerity policies have been relatively mild in the two countries and cannot alone explain recent changes.

AB - Denmark and Sweden have some of the largest public sectors in Europe. They are also characterized by predominantly voluntaristic labor market models where collective bargaining and employee involvement play a relatively strong role in public sector employment relations (ER). In this chapter, we analyze similarities and differences between the two countries regarding their public sectors and their public sector ER. The analysis focuses on three themes: main public services reforms and New Public Management (NPM), changes in the ER and job levels and the relationship between parliamentary politics and ER. Finally, a multiple austerity typology proposed by Lodge and Hood (2012) is applied to the two Scandinavian cases. We argue that although employment levels remain high, and the public sector ER systems are still basically voluntaristic, changes have been seen in ER models. These changes have been more profound in Sweden than in Denmark, but they took place before the 2008 crisis. In Sweden, an economic crisis in the 1990s was a much more important driver than the post- 2008 crisis. The 1990s crisis contributed to an earlier implementation of NPM and to a higher degree of decentralization of public sector wage setting than in Denmark. It is furthermore argued that post-2008 austerity policies have been relatively mild in the two countries and cannot alone explain recent changes.

M3 - Book chapter

T3 - Routledge Critical Studies in Public Management

SP - 218

EP - 243

BT - Public Service Management and Employment Relations in Europe. Emerging from the Crisis

A2 - Bach, Stephen

A2 - Bordogna, Lorenzo

PB - Routledge

CY - New York

ER -

ID: 164587407