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The Insider-Outsider Theory Reconsidered: Labor Markets as Human Ecosystems

Dennis Snower

No 21067, CEPR Discussion Papers from Centre for Economic Policy Research

Abstract: Whereas labor markets are traditionally viewed as machine-like environments – where agents, coordinated by price signals, solve constrained optimization problems or adhere to established heuristics – this paper views labor markets as human ecosystems, containing living things, namely, the human beings who participate in these markets. Living things adapt to their environment and evolve across their domains of life. Consequently, activities in labor markets cannot be understood independently of their social and political foundations. Labor markets are embedded in social, economic, political and environmental systems, and their adaptiveness to their social and natural environments. In this context, the insider-outsider theory may be generalized by reconceptualizing insiders and outsiders in terms of their relative adaptive advantages and the structural barriers to adaptation. The functions and misfunctions of adaptively embedded labor markets can be specified in terms of the adaptiveness as systems or the adaptiveness of the components of these systems. The insider-outsider theory indicates why there is no “invisible hand†whereby agents that are individually adaptive will lead to a labor market that is systemically adaptive at the labor-market or economy-wide levels. The ecosystemic approach also involves a reconceptualization of agents operating in labor markets, implying a new theories of the firm and workers. The first- and second-best policy implications are briefly surveyed.

JEL-codes: B52 D23 D70 J41 J63 J64 O43 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026-01
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