FINANCIALISATION AND WORK IN THE EU: INEQUALITY, DEBT AND LABOUR MARKET SEGMENTATION

被引:0
作者
Santos, Ana C. [1 ]
Lopes, Claudia A. [1 ,2 ]
Betzelt, Sigrid [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Coimbra, Ctr Social Studies, Coimbra, Portugal
[2] Univ Cambridge, Cambridge, England
[3] Berlin Sch Econ & Law, Berlin, Germany
来源
REVISTA DE ECONOMIA MUNDIAL | 2017年 / 46期
关键词
EU; Financialisation; Inequality; Household Debt; Labour Market Segmentation; FINANCE;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
This article examines the link between financialisation and work in five EU countries representative of different types of financial system and welfare regime: Sweden, Germany, the UK, Portugal and Poland. This is done by way of a cross-country comparative exercise that analyses micro-level survey data on household income, debt, and working conditions. Notwithstanding some differences across the countries, living conditions have worsened after the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) for a substantial number of households, as reflected in respondents' reports of declining household income, recourse to debt to cover living expenses and deteriorated employment relations. As the finance-work nexus has been more detrimental to low-income and non-standard workers in Germany and Poland, the article concludes that the impacts of financialisation on well-being cannot be simply inferred from the sizes of national financial systems or the extent of household engagement with finance, nor from extant welfare regime typologies. To better account for these impacts one also needs to consider the more intermediate effects of finance on well-being through labour market segmentation.
引用
收藏
页码:91 / 116
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The Influence of Labour Market Determinants on Economic Inequality Measured by Gini Coefficient in Montenegro
    Popovic, Nemanja
    Radovic, Milivoje
    Duraskovic, Jovan
    REVIJA ZA SOCIJALNU POLITIKU, 2023, 30 (02): : 203 - 221
  • [42] Implications of COVID-19 labour market shocks for inequality in financial wellbeing
    Ferdi Botha
    John P. de New
    Sonja C. de New
    David C. Ribar
    Nicolás Salamanca
    Journal of Population Economics, 2021, 34 : 655 - 689
  • [43] Racialisation of Immigrants at Work: Labour Mobility and Segmentation of Peruvian Migrants in Chile
    Mora, Claudia
    Undurraga, Eduardo A.
    BULLETIN OF LATIN AMERICAN RESEARCH, 2013, 32 (03) : 294 - 310
  • [44] Impact of Active Labour Market Policy Programs on Employment in the EU During the Crisis
    Godec, Lucija Cerar
    Benicna, Joze
    CENTRAL EUROPEAN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REVIEW, 2018, 16 (01) : 31 - 50
  • [45] ATYPICAL FORMS OF EMPLOYMENT - A HINT OF PRECARIOUSNESS? STRUGGLING WITH THE SEGMENTATION AND PRECARISATION OF THE LABOUR MARKET
    Kotulovski, Karla
    Laleta, Sandra
    EU 2020 - LESSONS FROM THE PAST AND SOLUTIONS FOR THE FUTURE, 2020, 4 : 701 - 732
  • [46] Structural labour market change, cognitive work, and entry to parenthood in Germany
    Bogusz, Honorata
    Matysiak, Anna
    Kreyenfeld, Michaela
    POPULATION STUDIES-A JOURNAL OF DEMOGRAPHY, 2024,
  • [47] Measuring Inequality of Opportunity for the Backward Communities: Regional Evidence from the Indian Labour Market
    Chandan Sharma
    Sudharshan Reddy Paramati
    Social Indicators Research, 2018, 138 : 479 - 503
  • [48] Measuring Inequality of Opportunity for the Backward Communities: Regional Evidence from the Indian Labour Market
    Sharma, Chandan
    Paramati, Sudharshan Reddy
    SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH, 2018, 138 (02) : 479 - 503
  • [49] Inequality in social capital and labour market re-entry among unemployed people
    Bonoli, Giuliano
    Turtschi, Nicolas
    RESEARCH IN SOCIAL STRATIFICATION AND MOBILITY, 2015, 42 : 87 - 95
  • [50] Social expenditure composition, inequality and growth in the OECD: Labour market policies are most effective
    Bacao, Pedro
    Duarte, Joshua
    Simoes, Marta
    JOURNAL OF POLICY MODELING, 2024, 46 (01) : 75 - 89