• No results found

Ports, dock workers and labour market conflicts

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "Ports, dock workers and labour market conflicts"

Copied!
2
0
0

Loading.... (view fulltext now)

Full text

(1)

GOTHENBURG STUDIES IN ECONOMIC HISTORY 13

Social Democracy

and the Swedish welfare model

_______________________________________________

Ideational analyses of attitudes towards competition, individualization, privatization

John Lapidus

AKADEMISK AVHANDLING

som med vederbörligt tillstånd av Handelshögskolans fakultetsnämnd vid Göteborgs universitet för vinnande

av ekonomie doktorsexamen i ekonomisk historia framläggs till offentlig granskning

fredagen den 30 januari 2015, kl. 10.15 i hörsal Sappören, Sprängkullsgatan 25, Göteborg

Fakultetsopponent: Docent Jenny Andersson, Uppsala Universitet, CNRS Senior Research Fellow vid Sciences Po, Paris

Göteborg 2015

GOTHENBURG STUDIES IN ECONOMIC HISTORY 12

Ports, dock workers and labour market conflicts

_______________________________________________

Jesper Hamark

AKADEMISK AVHANDLING

som med vederbörligt tillstånd av Handelshögskolans fakultetsnämnd vid Göteborgs universitet för vinnande

av filosofie doktorsexamen i ekonomisk historia framläggs till offentlig granskning

fredagen den 19 december 2014, kl. 10.15 i hörsal Sappören, Sprängkullsgatan 25, Göteborg.

Fakultetsopponent: Docent Tapio Bergholm, University of Eastern Finland

Göteborg 2014

(2)

ABSTRACT

Social Democracy and the Swedish welfare model: Ideational analyses of attitudes towards competition, individualization, privatization

Gothenburg Studies in Economic History 13 (2015) ISBN 978-91-86217-12-9

http://hdl.handle.net/2077/37702 Author: John Lapidus

Doctoral Dissertation in Economic History at the Department of Economy and Society, School of Business, Economics and Law, University of Gothenburg, P.O. Box 625, SE-405 30 Gothenburg, Sweden. (Written in English)

Distribution: Department of Economy and Society (address as above)

This dissertation consists of an introduction and five research papers dealing with insti- tutional change and how different actors, mainly Social Democracy and its related trade unions, have interacted with the same. Sweden was one of the countries that developed a welfare model able to combine economic growth with increasing universalism and equality both on the labour market and in the welfare state arena. During the last decades, however, the model has undergone a lot of change. This includes developments such as the introduc- tion of a new competition policy, the greater use of individual wage setting, the rise of private health insurance and the new state-subsidized topping up possibilities within major welfare services. By using different types of ideational analysis, these are the four areas investigated in the papers of this thesis. Papers 2-5 deal with more recent developments, while paper 1 focuses on a time before the emergence of this type of welfare regime.

Paper 1 examines why Social Democracy had such a permissive attitude towards cartels in the 1920s. It is found that the idea of socialization was the main factor behind the per- missive attitude, i.e. that monopolistic associations were seen as suitable targets for future socialization.

Paper 2 investigates how different actors have viewed competition legislation over time.

One of the findings is that a new consensus on competition policy became possible only after Social Democracy abandoned the idea to give the public sector a unique position in terms of competition legislation.

Paper 3 reviews and examines the arguments for individual wage setting brought for- ward by the largest Swedish trade union. I find a lack of sustainability in the arguments for individual wages.

Paper 4 analyzes the discrepancy between political rhetoric and practice with regard to the rapid rise of private health insurance. I also investigate the relation between privatized delivery and privatized funding.

Paper 5 describes the new state-subsidized topping up possibilities within three major welfare services. It is argued that it represents a departure from the idea of universal welfare services, which aimed to get rid of means-tested, selective elements.

KEYWORDS: privatization, individualization, competition, Social Democracy, Scandinavian welfare model, institutional change, trade unions, competition policy, car- tel legislation, the idea of socialization, solidaristic wage policy, private health insurance, individual wage setting, ideational analysis

References

Related documents

Taken together, our results from Stages 4, 5 and 6 allow us to conclude that our policy interventions of minimum quotas, weak or strong preferential treatment, and repetition of the

This dissertation takes on different topics in the field of cartel research by investigating car- tels and cooperation in two Swedish industries, Limestone and Cement.. The time

KEYWORDS: port technology, port productivity, Port of Gothenburg, dock workers, inter-in- dustry propensity to strike, isolated mass hypothesis, strikes and lockouts,

Ports, dock workers and labour market conflicts Gothenburg Studies in economic History 12 (2014) iSbn: 978-91-86217-11-2.. http://hdl.handle.net/2077/37421 Author:

KEYWORDS: privatization, individualization, competition, Social Democracy, Scandinavian welfare model, institutional change, trade unions, competition policy, car- tel legislation,

Specifically, it addresses two important facets of firm dynamics, namely, firm performance (growth and profitability) and the change in competition intensity that Swedish

Whereas data protection authorities are unable to address privacy concerns related to merger control, competition enforcers are in a much better position to prevent potential

working environment. However, Study 4 also suggests a fundamental prob- lem associated with schools’ working environment being dependent on characteristics of their