Interesting report over 2 articles in The Guardian, 25/06/99. Here's both: 
1. Social Chapter does not destroy jobs by Larry Elliott and Mark Atkinson
2. In pursuit of prosperity-     The evidence does not confirm 
    the classic right-wing claim that getting rid of unions prevents 
    European-style unemployment in Britain. by Mark Atkinson.
    
 
1. Social Chapter does not destroy jobs by Larry Elliott and Mark Atkinson

1. Social Chapter Does not destroy Jobs
Larry Elliott & Mark Atkinson

The west's economic think tank yesterday attacked rightwing claims that 
Europe's chronic unemployment problem is caused by featherbedding workers 
with employment laws making it difficult for companies to hire and fire.

Rejecting the economic orthodoxy of the past 20 years, the Organisation 
for Economic Cooperation and Development said it could find no direct link 
between tough regulations on job security and high unemployment.

The OECD's findings are bound to be seized upon by unions and politicians 
who argue that Europe's position as the world's unemployment blackspot is 
the result of weak growth rather than curbs on the freedoms of employers.

In its annual Employment Outlook, the Paris-based club for the world's 
richest 29 nations said: "This analysis strengthens the conclusion that 
employment protection legislation strictness has little or no effect on 
overall unemployment.'

The report also cast doubt on the claim that laws to protect workers in 
Europe discriminate against women and young people. It found that when all 
factors were taken into consideration there was little evidence that 
particular sections of the population were being frozen out of the labour 
market by employment protection legislation.

Unemployment in the OECD area has increased by 10 million during the 
1990s, rising from 25 to 35 million. The Employment Outlook predicts 
little change over the next two years, with 7% of the active population in 
the west's richest countries on the dole.

Europe has a jobless rate of 10%; most politicians and the European 
Central Bank pin the blame on a lack of flexibility within the labour 
market.

While the OECD says that flexibility can improve the speed at which the 
labour market responds to changing patterns of demand, it provides no 
backing for those keen to introduce a Margaret Thatcher-style shake-up of 
the European job market. The report merely notes that employment 
protection legislation should be kept under review so that it can be 
verified that "excessive or poorly designed provision', are not barriers 
to jobs for social groups that may find it hard to break into the labour 
market .

*  The fragile recovery in confidence among Britain's troubled 
manufacturing sector has been knocked back, new figures showed yesterday. 
Confidence levels and orders fell in June, according to the CBI's latest 
monthly snapshot of the manufacturing sector, and export orders remain at 
historically low levels. 


+++++++

2. In pursuit of prosperity

    The evidence does not confirm 
    the classic right-wing claim that 
    getting rid of unions prevents 
    European-style unemployment in 
    Britain.
    
    
    Mark Atkinson
    Guardian 25-o0-99
    
    The contrast could not be starker.
    Unemployment in Germany is not
    far below a post-war high of 4
    million while in Britain it's the
    lowest for 19 years. The right's
    standard explanation is that,
    thanks to Thatcher, Britain has a
    labour market free of restrictions.
    
    British firms are able to hire and
    fire at will while the Germans are
    tied up in red tape. This line of
    reasoning lies behind the
    government's determination to
    regulate the labour market with "a
    light touch" and its entreaties to
    European Union counterparts to reform along AngloSaxon
    lines.
    
    But the Organisation of
    Economic Cooperation and
    Development thinks otherwise. In
    fact Tony Blair may have been
    needlessly timid when it came to
    redressing the balance of power
    between labour and capital via the
    minimum wage, trade union
    legislation and implementation of
    Brussels' employment directives.
    
    In its annual employment
    outlook, the OECD shatters the
    orthodox assumption that strict
    employment protection legislation
    costs jobs. It finds no firm
    evidence of a link between the laws
    governing labour and economic
    performance. The box speaks
    volumes: union strength varies
    wildly, offering no correlation with
    prosperity.
    
    That there are differences in
    employment protection between
    low unemployment Britain and
    jobless Germany is riot in doubt.
    Along with the United States,
    New Zealand and Canada, Britain has
    the least restrictive regulatory
    regime. At the other extreme are the
    southern European countries, France and Germany, which have
    relatively strict employment
    protection. France has just
    introduced a top limit of 35 hours
    that may be worked each week.
    
    Yet the OECD says interventions by the state have
    "little or no effect" on unem-
    ployment. A tough regulatory
    regime does benefit men of
    prime working age at the ex-
    pense of young people and
    women who find it hard to
    break into the labour market.
    But when alternative expla-
    nations for joblessness are
    factored in - such as the
    level of demand - the appar-
    ent link breaks down.
    
    While male workers in countries
    with strict regulatory regimes
    appear to have a better chance of
    being in work than other social
    groups, the correlation becomes
    "very weak and statistically insignificant" when other
    factors are considered.
    
    Does it then follow that Britain
    could afford to double the minimum
    wage, reintroduce the closed shop
    and secondary picketing and scrap
    the wide range of exemptions
    covered by the EU working time
    directive, which seeks to limit hours
    worked and provide for minimum
    paid holidays, without suffering
    harmful effects?
    
    Probably not. For while strict
    employment protection regimes do
    not appear to influence either the
    levels or the demographic
    composition of both
    unemployment and employment,
    they do lower labour market
    turnover, says the OECD. That is
    not a problem for people lucky
    enough to be in work. It just means
    they have a better chance of
    keeping their jobs.
    
    But the flip side is that the
    periods the jobless spend on the
    dole tend to last longer. "With
    stricter employment protection legislation, fewer
    individuals become unemployed,
    but those who become
    unemployed are at a greater risk of
    remaining unemployed for a year or
    more."
    
    Long-term unemployment is an
    obvious social evil. It can also
    prevent the efficient functioning of
    the labour market. While
    employment legislation might not
    directly cause unemployment, it can slow
    down the labour market's
    response to changing patterns of
    demand due to the extra costs, in
    time and money, incurred by
    companies when hiring and firing.
    
    But it is also true that demand for,
    and not supply of, labour is in the
    driving seat.  Without an adequate
    level of ~ demand in the economy, there is nothing for the most
    flexible jobs market to respond to.
    
    This perhaps sheds some light
    on why the British economy and
    labour market has outperformed its
    major European competitors in the
    last seven years.
    
    The period began with a
    powerful boost to demand in the
    form of a competitive devaluation
    prompted by Britain's exit from the
    European exchange rate
    mechanism. From then on it is
    widely acknowledged by
    economists that macroeconomic
    management has been well
    handled, first by Kenneth Clarke
    and now by an independent Bank
    of England. Moreover fiscal policy
    has been tightened to such a
    degree that Gordon Brown has
    been able to find room to support
    demand without compromising
    long-term budgetary targets.
    
    By contrast, Germany, and by
    association much of the
    rest of Europe, has been
    imprisoned for most of the 1990s
    by a monetary straightjacket
    imposed by the Bundesbank, an
    overvalued currency and restrictive
    fiscal policy designed to ensure it
    qualified for monetary union.
    
    Faced with expanding demand,
    the improved flexibility of the UK
    labour market has enabled it to
    generate an unprecedented number
    of jobs. But it would not have done
    so without the increased level of
    demand.
    
    As the UK economy struggles
    to recover from what is officially a
    short-term cyclical downturn
    prompted by last year's global
    financial crisis, the government
    will be hoping it proves to be just
    that. Otherwise it will soon
    discover the downside of a flexible
    labour market - rapid job gains
    matched by rapid job losses.
    
    Mark Atkinson is our
    economics correspondent
 
    

<end both articles>


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