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The Europeanization of Wage Policy and Its Consequences for Labor Politics: The Case of Ireland
Author(s)
Date Issued
2024-10
Date Available
2024-11-01T10:30:24Z
Abstract
This article investigates the transnational labor politics associated with the Europeanization of wage policy, based on process tracing of Irish minimum wage regulation reforms over the past two decades. The policy struggle in Ireland started as an employer-led domestic challenge to market-embedding regulation and was then affected by two EU interventions on wage policy: one with a de-regulatory orientation (during EU-IMF conditionality) and one with a re-regulatory one (with the approval of the EU minimum wage directive). Findings show that differences in collective action undertaken by employers and trade unions to influence wage policy at the national level can be explained by the intersection of each actor’s preferences toward market-constraining or liberalizing labor regulation and their access to supranational (EU-level) institutions and support. This analysis contributes to debates on how transnational opportunity structures can alter labor’s and employers’ local power resources and strategies.
Sponsorship
European Commission Horizon 2020
European Research Council
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Journal
Industrial and Labor Relations Review
Volume
77
Issue
5
Start Page
716
End Page
741
Copyright (Published Version)
2024 the Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0019-7939
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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The Europeanization of Wage Policy and Its Consequences for Labor Politics_accepted version.pdf
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400.22 KB
Format
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