Verlag:
CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis, The Hague
Labour market flexibility determines the possibilities of workers and firms to adjust to changes in the economic environment. This study focuses on the role of the most important types of labour relations that are observed on the Dutch labour market:...
mehr
ZBW - Leibniz-Informationszentrum Wirtschaft, Standort Kiel
Fernleihe:
keine Fernleihe
Labour market flexibility determines the possibilities of workers and firms to adjust to changes in the economic environment. This study focuses on the role of the most important types of labour relations that are observed on the Dutch labour market: permanent contracts, temporary contracts and self-employment. The five chapters in this study provide new empirical evidence on individual labour market outcomes in the most recent period in the Netherlands. The evidence shows that wages in the Netherlands increase strongly with tenure (chapter 3), that temporary workers earn less and are more often overeducated for the work they do (chapter 4), that temporary workers receive less employer-funded training (chapter 5), that temporary jobs can act as a steppingstone for certain kinds of workers, such as highly educated individuals (chapter 6), and that self-employment can act as a steppingstone for certain groups, as well (chapter 7). The evidence is nested in a conceptual framework that discusses the advantages and disadvantages of labour market flexibility for both workers and firms. An overall conclusion is that the coexistence of different types of labour contracts makes sense, since they serve different goals on the labour market.