This study uses data from a continuous employee web-survey to investigate the trade-off between wage and workforce adjustments and the role of industrial relations in firm-level responses to the economic crisis in Germany and the Netherlands. Workforce adjustments seemed to be a continuous organizational strategy, but wage adjustments were less often reported. We found no large-scale evidence of wage concessions being traded-off for job protection in the two countries. Collective bargaining ensured that wage-setting was more robust than employment protection: employees covered by collective agreements reported workforce adjustments more often than wage adjustments. Low-educated and low-wage employees reported basic wage reductions more often: the economic crisis increased wage inequality. Labour hoarding was reported predominantly by young, male employees with a permanent, full-time contract.
CITATION STYLE
Tijdens, K., van Klaveren, M., Bispinck, R., Dribbusch, H., & Öz, F. (2014). Wage and workforce adjustments in the economic crisis in Germany and the Netherlands. European Journal of Industrial Relations, 20(2), 165–183. https://doi.org/10.1177/0959680113516181
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