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Trade, Employment, and Welfare: A Comparative Study of Trade and Labour Market Policies in Sweden and New Zealand, 1880-1980
Review "This is an ingeniously clever comparison of the macroeconomic policies of Sweden and New Zealand, worlds apart geographically, but each committed to full employment, price stability, and greater economic equality over the period 1880 to 1980."--Choice Product Description Deborah Mabbett analyses the historical development of the political economy of Sweden and New Zealand. She examines the reasons why two countries, whose governments shared similar political objectives of full employment, income equality, and social security, should have developed markedlydifferent policies towards the welfare state, wage bargaining, and trade. Sweden adhered, with a few exceptions, to a policy of free trade, while New Zealand was highly protectionist. Sweden's wage-fixing institutions were corporatist, while in new Zealand the state played a much larger role inwage determination. Sweden developed a much larger public sector and a more extensive system of social security transfers than New Zealand. Dr Mabbett investigates these differences through an examination of the whole set of economic and social policies adopted in the two countries in relation toemployment and wage determination. About the Author Deborah Mabbett is Lecturer in the Economics Department at Brunel University.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
1995-08-24
FULL EMPLOYMENT POLICIES
Public welfare
PUBLIC WELFARE_SWEDEN
NEW ZEALAND_ECONOMIC POLICY
SWEDEN_ECONOMIC POLICY
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS_SWEDEN
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