New politics in German labour market policy? The implications of the recent Hartz reforms for the German welfare state
Achim Kemmerling and
Oliver Bruttel
Discussion Papers, Research Unit: Labor Market Policy and Employment from WZB Berlin Social Science Center
Abstract:
The twin predicaments of German labour market performance and welfare state performance triggered an ongoing debate on reforming the German model. Recently, this debate has yielded an outcome in the form of the so-called Hartz laws, a bundle of labour market policies aimed at the reduction of unemployment and the decrease of non-wage labour costs. The Hartz reforms have played a prominent role in the public discussion, but are they really a watershed as both optimists and pessimists claim? In this article we argue that the Hartz reform is one of the most ambitious German reform projects since World War II, and embed it in an international context. We discuss three views of policy reform: reform as a process of policy-learning, as a process of competitive realignment and as a process of reinforcing path dependence. We show which of the three paradigms accounts for what part of the political result. We find evidence for both policy diffusion and retrenchment, but these follow a traditional German pattern: reforms within institutions rather than of institutions.
Date: 2005
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:zbw:wzblpe:spi2005101
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