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CELSI team published an article on industrial relations in the V4 during the COVID-19 pandemic


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CELSI team published an article on industrial relations in the V4 during the COVID-19 pandemic

Published on June 6, 2022 in Journal articles

CELSI team published an article on industrial relations in the V4 during the COVID-19 pandemic

CELSI researchers Lucia Kováčová, Katarína Lukáčová and CELSI co-founder and director Martin Kahanec published a research article on "Industrial relations and unemployment benefit schemes in the Visegrad countries during the COVID-19 pandemic" in Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research (SAGE Publishing).

 

CELSI researchers Lucia Kováčová, Katarína Lukáčová and CELSI co-founder and director Martin Kahanec published a research article on "Industrial relations and unemployment benefit schemes in the Visegrad countries during the COVID-19 pandemic" in Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research (SAGE Publishing).

Abstract:

The COVID-19 pandemic and the ensuing economic and technological adjustment increased the risk of unemployment, underemployment and skills mismatch across Europe. These increased risks highlighted the importance of national unemployment benefit schemes for income security. This article examines the role of industrial relations in shaping unemployment benefit regimes in the Visegrad countries during the COVID-19 pandemic. We adopted an actor-oriented approach based on desk research and 12 semi-structured interviews with the representatives of trade unions and employers in all the Visegrad countries. Our research showed that the capacities of the trade unions and employers' associations to shape the unemployment benefit regimes were rather limited. State control over social policy remained very strong and shaped the dynamics of industrial relations, without inclusive involvement of social partners. National governments sought to implement measures to protect employment (mainly wage subsidies), rather than to reform existing unemployment support regimes.

Downloadable: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/10242589221099804

 

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