Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Social Democratic Policies Under The Single Currency Very Preliminary Draft. Do Not Quote Ton Notermans Paper presented at the Mini Workshop Social Democracy and Economic Management: Can the Primacy of the Political be Regained? Robert Schuman Centre, European University Institute, May 31, 2000 1 Contents INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................................................... 4 THE COMEBACK OF SOCIAL DEMOCRACY ................................................................................ 8 SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC POLICY OPTIONS .................................................................................. 10 ARE EMU AND SOCIAL DEMOCRACY COMPATIBLE? ........................................................... 18 LIBERAL SOCIAL DEMOCRACY .................................................................................................... 21 AT THE BEGINNING OF A NEW SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC CENTURY? .................................. 26 REFERENCES ....................................................................................................................................... 32 2 Table of Figures FIGURE 1: UNEMPLOYMENT RATES, 1980 - 1999 ...................................................................................... 13 FIGURE 2: EMPLOYMENT AND UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE NETHERLANDS ................................................... 15 FIGURE 3: A SIMPLE TYPOLOGY OF SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC POLICIES ........................................................ 23 3 Introduction Although a host of factors must be invoked to explain the recent election victories, one factor clearly dominates, namely the disappointment with the economic outcomes of neo-liberal policies. At a time when more than 18 million Europeans are unemployed, social polarisation increases, and the electorally pivotal middle classes increasingly feel the threat of economic decline, the social democratic programme of a socially responsible market economy has again become attractive. Social Democrats, as Jos de Beus (2000B: 1) has argued, “must deal with local constituencies that are frustrated by globalisation or disappointed with the European Way of embedding global freedoms and risks.” In practice this would seem to imply that, in order to succeed politically and not disappoint the expectations of their electorate social democratic strategies in Europe must be seen to again re-establish the primacy of the political after almost two decades of discourse in which the overwhelming pressures of globalised markets in finance, goods, and services were invokes at the prime justification for subordinating goals like full-employment, a fair degree of income distribution, social protection and job-security, to the imperatives of international markets and competitiveness. Whereas the reference to pressures of globalisation and Europeanisation in the seventies and eighties may have played a useful role for social democrats to justify to their electorate the pursuit of policies which in practice were rather close to those advocated by its conservative and neo-liberal competitors (Notermans 1999), in the longer run such a strategy proved infeasible. First, it proved rather difficult to maintain a distinctive social democratic ideology on the basis of a discourse which de facto claimed that, given the structural conditions of the world economy social democratic policies unfortunately were not feasible. Secondly, whereas the reference to external constraints undoubtedly has played a crucial role in many countries to help social democrats solve problems of escalating inflation and budget deficits, inefficient public management and perverse welfare state arrangements (Dyson & Featherstone 1996, Oatley 1997), to adhere to it at a time when inflationary problems have been conquered and 4 mass-unemployment, welfare state retrenchment have become the main concerns of the electorate, is conducive to stimulating protectionist and anti-European sentiments. Indeed that part of the left which clings to the discourse that globalisation and Europeanisation undermine the European model of society with its relatively strong social protection and labour regulation increasingly find themselves perilously close to the extreme right as far as policy proposals is concerned. The strategists of the “Third Way” are acutely aware that such a strategy will inevitably end up in a cull de sac. If there is one clear common thread to the different national ideologies of the “Third Way”, it is to see Globalisation and Europeanisation as an opportunity rather than a threat. Indeed, during the last decade or so social democrats have replaced their Conservative, Christian Democratic competitors as the most fervent advocates of Europeanisation. Despite the clear commitment to Europe, there is much less clarity as far as the strategies to be pursued are concerned. Even amongst the new generation of “Third Way” leaders the need for European concertation and harmonisation in the case of taxation polices and welfare reform would seem rather contentious. Opinions range from the British labour party which advocates essentially the primacy of national strategies with “co-ordination” taking the form of learning from best practices, to German and French social democrats who suspect that without some form of harmonisation a viscous downward spiral of tax cutting and welfare retrenchment may ensue in the name of safeguarding national competitiveness. In terms of macroeconomic strategies de facto agreement between Third Way advocates seems to be stronger, namely in favour of “relaxed money by stealth” and adherence to the fiscal constraint of the stability pact. Yet in this areas most current leaders face strongly entrenched inner-party opposition – frequently with its stronghold in the public sector - who eventually sees the single currency as a way to re-enact the allegedly so successful Keynesian strategies of the fifties and sixties. This paper will try to speculate a bit about the possible shape of social democratic strategies for regaining the primacy of the political under the institutional conditions of a single currency. It makes four main arguments. First, the argument that welfare state arrangements 5 and labour regulations as characteristic of the European Model of Society are an impediment to international competitiveness and hence will have to be dismantled to a substantial degree is flawed. No doubt various forms of labour market regulation, large public sectors and some forms of welfare state arrangements have promoted rent-seeking and have had a negative impact on overall economic productivity, as compared to the US. However, countries with different degrees of productivity can very well coexist in the world economy (Krugman 1996). The price to be paid for productivity diminishing regulations is a lower real wage. Welfare state arrangements are a form of collective consumption, which given the feasible real wage as determined by productivity, are very well compatible with international competitiveness as long as wage earners are willing to accept the required taxes and the concomitant lower post-tax real wage. Second, the economic crisis of the seventies and eighties – i.e. the so-called decline of Keynesianism – which simultaneously implied a major ideological and political crisis for European social democracy - was not provoked by excessive regulation, welfare states and wages leading to inferior competitiveness but was of a purely macroeconomic nature. The essential problems of the post-war model of welfare state Keynesianism was that it proved impossible to reconcile competing claims on the national product under conditions of fullemployment hence leading to escalating inflation and/or budget deficits. Given the inability to reach agreement concerning distribution via a negotiated (corporatist way) unemployment, created by means of tight monetary policies, was reinstated as the principal mechanism for guaranteeing nominal stability. Third the Keynesian claim that the prosperity of the fifties and sixties was based on successful countercyclical management is a myth. Such policies were hardly pursued during the so-called “Golden Age” (Crafts & Toniolo 1996: 11-12) and they failed dismally when applied on a more widespread scale in the seventies. To many social democrats Keynesianism has come to appear as the quintessential form of economic governance which is based on the primacy of the political. After all Keynesianism claimed that it stood in the government’s power to correct market outcomes hence allowing economic management to be informed by politically determined goals like full-employment and a fair degree of income 6 distribution. Theoretically this argument rested on treating Consumption and Investment as potentially interchangeable components of aggregate demand implying that a shortfall in investment could easily be compensated for by increased public demand. In practice such a ”communist” strategies which intends to replace failing private investment activity with public expansion has been unworkable. The prosperity of the fifties and sixties depended on buoyant private investment demand and budget deficits. And as the experience of the seventies showed, budget deficits cannot compensate for depressed investment. Hence, and here the neo-liberal critique was quite right, the requirements of stimulating private investment activity will have to inform any successful economic strategy. Fourth, stimulating private investment activity, and here neo-liberalism erred, is fundamentally a macroeconomic issue. Deregulation, privatization, and welfare state reform may very well improve productivity and profitability. However, because they affect in principle all firms in the same way they cannot be a sufficient condition for a growth in aggregate investment, as again is shown by the coexistence in Europe of levels of profitability comparable to those of the sixties with slow growth. Aggregate growth and investment requires expectation of a growing market. Accordingly growth is essentially a reflexive phenomenon to the extent that growth will occur if sufficient private investors expect it to occur. 1 Since it stands in the power of the central bank to terminate any upswing by means of tight money, as central banks have indeed shown impressively in the seventies, it acquires a central role in creating expectations of growth. In other words, cheap money would appear as a necessary condition for growth. However is not a sufficient condition for sustainable growth since sustainable growth requires effective control of inflationary pressures. As a result, this paper argues, social democratic strategies for regaining the dominance of the political should preferably take the form of cheap money combined with arrangements to prevent a resurgence of the inflationary instabilities of the seventies. Accordingly the paper ends with a plea for “liberal social democracy” which combines elements of expansionary monetary management with economic openness, deregulation, especially of the public sector 1 On the macroeconomic importance of self-fulfilling prophecies see also Farmer 1999. 7 and fiscal tightness, in order to both stimulate growth and create economic and political constraints on potentially inflationary market behavior. The Comeback of Social Democracy Despite frequent changes in tactics, strategy, and theory since its roughly one hundred years of existence, European social democracy retains an identifiable core namely the claim that political corrections of market outcomes are required in order for prosperity and a fair distribution of opportunities and incomes to obtain (Bobbio 1996 Ch. 6, Giddens 1998: 40-41, 45, Sassoon 1996: 738). It is primarily this promise of a tamed and more equitable capitalism that has accounted for the electoral attractiveness of social democracy. Throughout its history social democracy has mainly been judged by the outcomes it seemed able to produce than by the means to do so. Although, in some cases far into the sixties, many party activist held that social democracy without the goal of a socialist economy was unthinkable, the means of socialism – though frequently at the centre of social democratic rhetoric – remained largely irrelevant for the practical policies of social democracy, exactly because social democrats never managed to show that socialism indeed was the means to a prosperous and equitable economy. Similarly the apparent breakdown of the Keynesian strategies in the seventies and the increasing dysfunctionalities of the welfare state seduced many to again predict the end of social democracy. Just as for previous generation social democracy without socialism seemed an oxymoron, now social democracy without the Keynesian welfare state seemed an impossibility. Yet, not the occasional failure of its strategies, but the convincing demonstration that the ‘untamed capitalism’ - or better, the somewhat less regulated capitalism advocated by the political rivals to its right – is economically superior could have proven fatal to European social democracy. Such proof has not been forthcoming, however. Historically the more liberally oriented management of European economies has excelled in combating inflation and reducing, or at least halting escalating public indebtedness while at the same time being unable to come to terms with unemployment and low growth. This was so in the 1920s when the inflation, frequently caused by expansionary policy 8 management after the termination of hostilities in 1918, brought a turn to economic liberalism. Yet, the stagnation and unemployment that accompanied the liberal recipe lay the groundwork for the dominance of social democratic concepts of economic management, which gradually conquered western Europe starting with the great Depression. The experience was repeated in the 1970s and 1980s. European voters turned its back on social democracy when the recipes of the Keynesian welfare state seemed to have become recipes for economic destabilisation. British, German, Dutch and Danish Social Democrats, to name just the most spectacular cases lost office around the beginning of the eighties when their programmes seemed to aggravate rather than solve problems of inflation, unemployment and rapidly increasing budget deficits. In the nineties those parties who succeeded social democrats in office lost the favour of the electorate as the promise of a return to growth and prosperity by means of a neo-liberal programme of macroeconomic austerity and deregulatory supply side policies has become increasingly implausible. Gerhard Schröder’s and Tony Blair's landslide victories, as well as Lionel Jospin’s somewhat less impressive victory, at heart are nothing more or less than a mandate for effective policies against unemployment and economic stagnation. In retrospect then it would not seem too surprising that social democracy would experience an impressive comeback in the nineties, even though having been declared dead by most observers of the West European scene in the eighties. Nevertheless, the recent election victories are not sufficient to decisively reject the thesis of the end of social democracy as it yet has to prove that it possesses a feasible alternative to neoliberalism. Whether social democracy will be able to consolidate its present electoral popularity will depend first and foremost on whether it can find an answer to the economic problems it inherited from its predecessors. It will certainly not, as many traditionalists claim, depend on the extent to which it manages to resurrect a policy programme that remains ideologically true to the old concepts of the Keynesian welfare state. To what extent, then can social democratic governments translate the thesis of a tamed capitalism into practical politics under the new institutional conditions created by Europe’s single currency? Although all European social democrats from Kiruna to Crete readily agree 9 that the process of economic globalisation requires intensified co-operation at the European level, there has been surprisingly little high-level debate about the prospects and contours of a European social democratic strategy under EMU. Moreover, at the level of practical policies several social democratic governments, like e.g., the British, Danish and Dutch, seem quite reluctant to support a social democratisation of European in the sense of harmonisation of taxation and social security and co-ordinated macroeconomic expansion. Support for EMU from European social democrats has first of all been informed by the problems and opportunities that presented themselves at the national level, and has hardly even been informed by the prospects of international co-operation. Social Democratic Policy Options The fears that integration threatens social democracy have mainly been based on the exit option, which capital is seen to have gained as a result of internationalisation, and the neoliberal regime that seemed to have become established at the European level with the SEA. Since the crucial social democratic goals of full-employment and extended welfare were seen to be reached by means of economic regulations and policies that were costly to business, business is expected to desert social democratic countries if given the opportunity. Fritz Scharpf (1996), for example, argues that increased international competition means that many of the regulatory programs including welfare state arrangements will put national business at a competitive disadvantage and hence cannot be performed at national level any longer. Since the institutional arrangements of the EU prejudice deregulation (negative integration) over regulation (positive integration) Europeanisation acquires an anti social democratic bias. Monetary union would seem to exacerbate this bias as it stimulates international economic competition while depriving the nations states of many of their macroeconomic instruments. Moreover, the new European level institution of the ECB displays a fundamentally restrictive orientation. The upshot of the argument was that for social democracy to be successful it needed to bring about a decisive break with the neo-liberal policy tradition, which in turn required either that the nation state again acquired a greater degree of autonomy with respect to the EU, or a 10 radical change in the orientation of EMU. In the latter case EMU should be remodelled to function as an arrangement that would allow for the pursuit of the successful expansionary macroeconomic policies of the fifties and sixties. But whereas the neo-liberal recipe of tight fiscal and monetary framework coupled with deregulation and flexibilisation, have indeed failed to return European economies to fullemployment, the argument that successful social democratic strategies cannot be pursued within the present set-up of EMU may appear increasingly doubtful. Especially since the midnineties, a number of states - frequently within the framework of corporatist social pacts (Rhodes 2000a,b) - have developed successful strategies for reducing unemployment that did not follow the neo-liberal recipe of radical deregulation and labour market flexibilisation, and yet are compatible with the EMU framework since they do not rely on macroeconomic stimulation. Four main strategies can be distinguished. Redistribution of labour. Redistribution of labour has been practised in an inclusionary and exclusionary variant. The latter variant brings about a reduction in unemployment rates by excluding weaker groups from labour market participation. The main mechanisms have been early retirement and the extensive use of disability. The inclusionary variant reduces unemployment by distributing the available volume of labour over as many members of the workforce as possible. Its main mechanism consists of reducing the working hours per employee and extensive use of part-time employment. Job creation by means of wage differentiation. In most European countries there is a substantial potential for job creation in services, and especially personal services, that can not be realised due to a fairly limited differentiation of wages. For the middle classes to exert a significant demand for labour, their incomes have to be considerably in excess of the minimal incomes. Accordingly the creation of a so-called low wage sector would seem to hold the promise of a reduction of unemployment. A series of mechanism is available for bringing about such a larger wage differentiation, from outright reduction of minimum wages coupled with a more than proportional reduction in unemployment benefits to wage subsidies and tax breaks. Job creation in the public sector. The alternative to creation of service sector jobs by means of greater wage differentiation is high public sector employment financed by a high 11 level of taxes. In this strategy the state appropriates a larger share of wage earners incomes through taxes – hence leading to lower disposable incomes – in order to spend it in an employment efficient way. The constellation of high taxes, comparatively low post tax incomes and high levels of public employment presently is typical only of the Scandinavian states. Job creation strategies for competitiveness and innovation. Judging by their programmatic statements, innovation and competitiveness is considered by most European social democrats the key to improved economic prosperity. High unemployment requires high growth rates and the latter can only be achieved by an economy that is eminently competitive in the global market place. In contrast to the neo-liberal strategy such a competitive economy will not result automatically from a withdrawal of the state, but will rather require active state involvement. Although most social democratic governments presently agree that a larger degree of labour market flexibility is desirable, active state involvement is required particularly in the areas of stimulating innovation and education. (Blair & Schröder 1999) In the Netherlands, Britain, Sweden and Denmark, social democratic governments, during the last few years have employed a combination a such strategies- with different weights attached to the different elements – in order to achieve at times quite impressive reductions in unemployment rates. As Figure 1 shows, in each of these countries unemployment has been reduced substantially during the nineties and presently is clearly below the average for the EU countries. The most widely hailed example that Social democracy and EMU are compatible is no doubt the so-called Dutch Poldermodel. Although, the UK, Sweden and Denmark and the UK have not joined the EMU, success in these cases did not rely on the traditional social democratic macroeconomic management. Keynesian deficit spending as a means to create employment has been decisively rejected by all three social democratic parties. Likewise monetary management is primarily assigned the task of providing a stable nominal framework rather than stimulating growth. The constraints of EMU membership apparently does not pose a insurmountable threat to social democracy’s traditional goals of full-employment, a strong welfare state and a fair degree of income equality. Indeed as the contributions in this volume show, in the UK, Sweden and Denmark the social democratic government members 12 responsible for economic management do not tend to see EMU membership as inimical to their present economic policy strategies. Figure 1: Unemployment Rates, 1980 - 1999 14 12 10 % 8 6 4 DK NL SW UK 2 EU 0 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 Source: OECD Yet, notwithstanding recent successes there are some doubts whether present strategies can form a blueprint for social democratic policies that will again allow it to conquer the ideological hegemony it enjoyed during the fifties and sixties. First, as Schettkat (1999: 167) has noted the GDP growth of success cases like the Netherlands, Ireland and Denmark is to a substantial degree due to increased competitiveness in international markets. But a strategy of real devaluation by means of moderating wage growth more than in competing countries essentially is a strategy for regional redistribution of labour with an obvious beggar your neighbour character. To regain competitiveness is, no doubt essential for any firm to survive. Similarly, individual nations can obviously increase, their levels of investment, growth 13 1999 and employment by stimulating exports. Neglecting to promote competitiveness conversely will result in reduced employment. However, to solve the unemployment problem in the aggregate by means of improved competitiveness in the EU would seem impossible as the bulk of the international trade of the member countries is with each other (Martin 2000). Regional gains in relative competitiveness per definition must be counterbalanced by regional losses. By removing many macroeconomic instruments that might be used to correct nationally specific shocks, EMU has promoted a sentiment of rallying around the flag, i.e., an increased emphasis of the common national interest of political parties and labour markets parties. As Martin Rhodes (2000a: 18, 2000b: 13-14,) argues partisan politics increasingly lose importance in the social pacts that have sprung up in Europe, largely in response to pressures to meet the Maastricht convergence criteria. Admittedly improving national competitiveness is just one of the driving forces that keep these pacts together with the need for welfare reform taking at least an equally important place. Moreover, there are largely differences in the degree to which national wage bargaining systems have indeed engaged in a strategy of real devaluation. Whereas Dutch wage moderation indeed has led to substantial cost advantages with the result of a large current account surplus,2 in Spain and Italy, for example, wage moderation mainly seems to have succeeded in keeping the inflation rate below the level required for EMU membership rather than substantially improving competitiveness. Second, the exclusionary variant of labour redistribution is increasingly hitting the limits of financeability. Early retirement, the use of disability programs and other measures intended to remove unemployed persons from the list of registered unemployment may have been a feasible strategy for a relatively short lived crisis. In the longer run such measures however tend to create a crisis of inactivity, which places intolerable burdens on the financing of the welfare state (Cox 1998). Indeed one of the reasons for the electoral success of social democracy results from the fact that exclusionary programs of labour redistribution increasingly fail to perform their - stated or unstated - purpose of protecting the core workforce 2 Since 1994 the Dutch current account balance, as a percentage of GDP, has been continuously above 5 percent. Source: OECD. 14 as the financial burdens incurred by such a strategy require welfare state cutbacks that also effect those in employment. 1200 12 1000 10 800 8 600 6 400 4 200 2 Hours/WAP Unemployment Rate 0 0 1969 1971 1973 1975 1977 1979 1981 1983 1985 1987 1989 1991 1993 Source: Unemployment, Working Age population, OECD; Employment, CBS. Inclusionary strategies, on the other hand not only reduce unemployment but also promise to relief the fiscal burden on the state. Moreover a fairer distribution of the available work fits more easily within social democracy’s traditional emphasis on equality and the centrality of labour. The Dutch case provides the most successful example of labour redistribution. Despite the fact that employment growth has been well above the EU average and has outstripped labour force growth since 1983 (Visser & Hemerijck 1997: 23-4) the success of the Dutch model rests first of all on a more equitable distribution of labour. Given the shortening of working hours and a substantial increase in part time employment, employment growth measured in jobs somewhat exaggerates the extent of employment creation. Figure 2 shows total employment, measured in hours per annum, divided by the working age population. The measure can be interpreted as the average hours of work 15 1995 % Hours Figure 2: Employment and Unemployment in the Netherlands statistically available per member of the working age population. After a long and steady decline the figure has slightly increased since the mid nineties, but is still substantially below the level recorded during the years of full-employment in the early seventies. The main problem with a strategy of labour redistribution may be of a political nature, as it will be hard to gain acceptance for the accompanying cuts in disposable income. Redistribution as wage moderation requires a large degree of solidarity of the employed with the unemployed. In the Dutch case such strategies to a not insignificant degree proved viable because they coincided with a strong Calvinist tradition of moderation. As Jos de Beus (2000A: 43) has argued: ‘Moderation is a token of the sense of public responsibility. In times of need leaders can even become popular by advocating moderation and by referring to both old rituals of atonement (embarrassment of riches, stagflation and pollution as sins) and more recent success-stories (post-war reconstruction). It is possible to imitate the Dutch social pact, yet it is impossible to import the Dutch culture of consumption.’. In Germany, for example, where trade unions have placed great emphasis on a strategy of shorter working hours, labour distribution has become rather unpopular because of the further cuts in disposable income it entails at a time of stagnant hourly wages, and rising tax and social security contributions. Redistribution of labour may be politically more acceptable if it takes place against a background of growing demand for labour. Put differently, labour redistribution seems most feasible as a strategy that makes the growth of labour demand more effective in terms of numbers of jobs created.3 Yet, as far as job creation is concerned, social democracy, according to most analyses, seems to be caught in a dilemma as it requires either Scandinavian levels of taxation or greater income inequality. Although it became a standard argument of the neo-liberalism of the eighties and nineties that the high tax levels required to finance extensive public employment are counterproductive as they reduce competitiveness, such in fact is not the case. The high level of collective consumption in Scandinavia has its counterpart in lower disposable incomes. Put 3 An important reason for the job-effectiveness of the relatively modest Dutch employment growth – measured in hours – is that about 60 percent of all jobs created since 1987 were of a part-time nature (Visser & Hemerijck 1997: 30). 16 differently the high Scandinavian taxation levels merely imply that a larger part of the feasible real wage, which is determined by the level of productivity, is appropriated by the state (E.g., Freeman 1997, 35, 45) Denmark, for example, with its average tax rate of around 50 percent and its extensive welfare state simultaneously is one of Europe’s success stories in terms of employment. Similarly, Swedish taxes and public employment levels remain at a very high level, albeit it that the economic crisis of the early nineties has required the latter to be scaled back somewhat. Rather, the Scandinavian solution of public employment would seem infeasible in most continental EU countries because of a lack of political support. In Scandinavia, with a long tradition of centralised states and strong paternalistic elements in a dominant social democracy, the fact that the state appropriates around half of average incomes may be politically acceptable, but not so on the continent. Moreover, in a time of increasing public discontent with bureaucratic rigidity and the quality of publicly provided services, strategies for a radical expansion of the public sector are unlikely to create support even if they hold out the promise of reduced unemployment (Scharpf 1997: 18). With the Scandinavian road barred, the only promising strategy for job creation would seem to be to tolerate the increasing earnings differentials, which will allow for the emergence of a low wage service sector that will soak up unemployment. Stimulation of low wage service employment can take a variety of forms. Strategies range from a radical deregulation of labour markets including the removal of the protection afforded by minimum wages and social security / unemployment benefits, to wage subsidies and tax credits. The British Labour Party has taken the dual track of reducing social security protection for young unemployed while providing wage cost subsidies and tax credits. The core of Jospin’s program to fight unemployment consist of the envisaged creation of up to 350000 subsidised low wage jobs, mainly in community services. In the Netherlands, low pay service employment has mainly been stimulated by the introduction of special low wage scales and wage cost subsidisation. The most common problem with such strategies would seem to be widespread ideological resistance within those social democratic parties that have traditionally emphasised equality. Indeed, to many on the political left of European social democracy such a strategy 17 would involve the final victory of neo-liberalism over the core convictions of social democracy. Yet, the ideological hurdles for a strategy of wage differentiation are not necessarily as imposing as it might seem at first sight. The existence of some discrepancy between its official ideology and political practice has not been an uncommon feature in European social democracy, and is rather unproblematic as long as it does not threaten electoral support. Given that a large part of the recent victories of social democracy is due to middle class voters, a strategy of wage differentiation may in theory stabilise this crucial vote if a low wage sector enables the middle class to purchase some of the services that the welfare state can no longer provide to the extent it used to, while at the same timing allowing for tax reduction due to reduced financing burdens for unemployment. To the extent that those who will fill the new jobs prefer low income employment to unemployment, it might not even threaten the electoral base amongst low income earners. Put differently, to define equality as inclusion instead of income equality (Giddens 1998: 101-4) may be politically successful. Presently the US and UK are taken to be the paradigmatic examples for the high employment creation potential of such low income sector strategies. With their traditionally weak (US) or radically weakened unions (UK), deregulated labour markets, low minimum wages, and the absence of steep income tax progression, the employment crisis of the seventies has resulted in a large increase in earning differentials and a rapid growth of low wage private service employment. Yet it is by no means obvious that the successes in both countries are to be attributed mainly to rising income inequality as they have simultaneously pursued a monetary policy different in orientation from the Bundesbank / ECB. Are EMU and Social Democracy Compatible? That macroeconomic stimulation, if at all, only has a minor role to play in solving the European unemployment problem has become a shared conviction amongst the left as well as the right since the 1970s. Admittedly the reasons vary, for some macroeconomic stimulation is futile per se as it only creates higher inflation in the long run or hampers the necessary structural adjustment. For others, the internationalisation of economic relations has de facto made the application of macroeconomic stimulation impossible. 18 A look at the history of unemployment in Europe since the seventies would not seem to confirm that macroeconomic management is unimportant. Since the seventies unemployment in Europe has increased sharply during three relatively brief periods, and stabilised at a successively higher level subsequently. Each increase is closely related to a period of macroeconomic restriction. The first jump in unemployment rates occurred during the mid seventies as a result of tight policies to fight inflationary pressures, which had already been strong during the early seventies and subsequently increased as a result of the second oil price shock. The second jump occurred around the late seventies and early eighties, in the context of another oil price shock and sharply restrictive macroeconomic policies. The hitherto last jump in unemployment rates occurred in the early 1990s and resulted from a combination of tight policies required to satisfy the Maastricht convergence criteria and the spread of the very tight Bundesbank stance after unification via the mechanism of fixed exchange rates. Given that increasing unemployment has been closely related to macroeconomic restriction it would seem plausible to suggest that the solution of Europe’s unemployment problem would require macroeconomic expansion. The standard counter-argument claims that the long term nature of the unemployment problem implies that it is of a structural nature. The theoretical background – shared by Keynesians and neoclassics alike – being that, in the long run, the level of all real variables like GDP and employment is determined by the structural parameters of the market like the degree of wage flexibility, the degree of competition, and the state of technology. Whereas macroeconomic management may affect economic outcomes in the short run, in the long run market adjustment will re-establish the prior situation. Unemployment which may have emerged in response to macroeconomic restriction, but which does not disappear in the longer run hence by definition is structural and therefore not apt to be cured by macroeconomic means. Yet, after more than a decade of supply side policies the European Union as a whole continues to suffer from mass-unemployment. Accordingly there are reasons for rethinking the identification of macroeconomic policies with short-term demand management and microeconomic policies with long-term supply-side factors. The problem may be illustrated with respect to private investment activity, no doubt the most crucial variable for long run growth 19 and employment. The desired level of capacity private entrepreneurs wish to attain, and accordingly the extent of net (dis)investment, depends critically on the expected rate of growth. Durably higher growth rates will, ceteris paribus, imply higher demand for the firm’s products and hence the need to durably extend the level of capacity. The overall growth rate of GDP, however, in essence is determined by the sum of private investment decision. It follows that objective factors like current profitability are not sufficient determinants of the level of investment. Indeed if profitability were the core determinants of private investment, Europe’s unemployment problem would have been solved already. Presently levels of profitability have again become roughly comparable to what they were in the fifties and sixties. Investment instead is crucially influenced by expectations about future growth rates. Since growth rates depend on the expectations and according investment decisions of a myriad of independent actors in a market economy, there is no unique, market determined rate. Instead expectation concerning growth have an essentially self-fulfilling character; growth indeed being low if the majority of actors expect it to be low et vice versa. It is on the expectations determining the level of investment, hence the supply side, that the macroeconomic regime probably has its most decisive impact. It stands in the power of any central bank to terminate an upswing by means of sufficient restriction of credit. Incidental phases of tight policy will, as a rule not affect longer term expectations. Yet a fundamental change in the policy regime informing central bank behaviour must necessarily have a strong impact on expectations. The long term nature of Europe’s unemployment hence can be interpreted not as the result of primarily structural factors but as the outcome of a downward adjustment of expectations in response to a change in monetary policy regime from the growth oriented outlook of the fifties and sixties to the disinflationary outlook since the seventies (Martin 2000). It follows that the core impact of the present EMU, which institutionalises the disinflationary regime at EU level, is to hamper strategies that attempt to solve the unemployment problem by high overall growth rates and instead requires social democrats to seek the solution in strategies of redistribution of labour – including strategies of real devaluation – and increasing earning inequality. Moreover, a restrictive monetary regime and 20 the resulting low growth rates also reduces the effectiveness of job growth strategies relying on wage differentiation. The demand for the services produced in a low wage sector will depend on the overall growth rate, i.e., on the expansion of higher and middle incomes. Put differently the lower the overall growth rate the higher the degree of wage differentiation would need to be in order to have the same employment effect. Finally, to the extent that ECB, like frequently done by the Bundesbank, comes to interpret rising growth and falling unemployment as advance indicators of inflation, none of the present strategies practised by social democrats will have a chance of succeeding. Put differently if the ECB de facto holds a high level of unemployment to be a precondition for low inflation than any strategy for lowering unemployment must fail as long as the macroregime remains unchanged. Liberal Social Democracy Whereas predictions that EMU will become the gravedigger of European social democracy would almost certainly seem incorrect, it is very doubtful whether under the present EMU regime social democracy will be able to develop an economic strategy that again will allow it to dominate the discourse in economic policymaking as it did in the fifties and sixties. That the social democratic discourse was dominant during the fifties and sixties – irrespective of whether social democrats were in government or not – in large part was due to the positive sum nature of the model of economic management that had emerged as a result of the great Depression and the second world war. Vigorous private sector growth not only allowed for fullemployment but also proved a most potent weapon against inequality. Since it is an irresistible temptation for any mass-party to claim the credits for good economic performance, the social democratic discourse that claimed that prosperity was the result of (Keynesian) government intervention became hard to resist also for parties of a different political hue. The political logic of ‘Third Way’ concepts consisted in overcoming the negative sum game of defending the interests of its welfare stand and low income clientele at the expense of destroying the market dynamics of prosperity creation in which the faltering growth rates since the seventies seemed to have placed social democracy. Instead politicians like Blair and Schröder attempted to define again a positive sum concept in which the combination of a neo- 21 liberal emphasis on deregulation, flexibility and the primacy of market forces for wealth creation was combined with an emphasis on a strong public role to promote innovation (Schröder) and education (Blair) thereby leading to growing economy, which would provide not only jobs for everybody but good jobs at that. In practice such promises have been hard to fulfil, as either substantial employment growth has been absent (as in all the large EMU members) or was combined with larger inequality (as in Britain). Accordingly most modern social democratic immediate measure for tackling the crisis, have an unmistakably stronger zero-sum structure – be it in the form of an exchange of shorter working hours and lower incomes for the employed to benefit the unemployed, or as an exchange of lower wages in return for employment. By their nature, however, such zero sum concepts are less suitable to create broad political consensus and instead are more vulnerable to alternative conceptions of distribution. Most present social democratic governments hope that the painful measures that have to be taken immediately will, in the longer run produce a virtuous cycle of strong growth of good jobs. Electorally such a strategy might seem risky. Much of the electoral success of social democracy was based on the voters' growing conviction that the neoliberal long-run in which prosperity and full employment would be restored, after more than a decade of such policies was indeed too far off into the futures. The disappointing outcome of the European elections of 1999 for all social democratic parties except the French PS may indicate that in the present situation social democracy may find it much harder to employ the neoliberal strategy of deferred gratification. More important, if ‘New Social Democracy’ (see Figure 3) were indeed to retains the emphasis on tight money as a necessary safeguard against inflation it preaches, it is unlikely to transform economic policy management into a positive sum game. At least a look at the 1920s – the previous period when policy making in Europe was dominated by a combination of tight money and liberal supply side policies is not encouraging. The inflation of the early twenties convinced policy makers of the need for tight money in the framework of a resurrected gold standard. The massive unemployment problem was to be solved mainly by lower wages. Notwithstanding their socialist rhetoric in terms of practical policies social democrats saw no alternative to tight money, and, although opposed to wage 22 cuts, the labour market situation frequently left no alternative. Since the mid 1920s however, their preferred alternative frequently came to centre on rationalisation – commonly inspired by the US example – as a way to increase both profitability, employment and wages simultaneously. Under a tight monetary regime however, stagnant demand meant that rationalisation rather contributed to unemployment whereas wage cuts added to the already present deflationary pressures. Indeed the ascendancy of ‘Keynesian’ social democracy during the Great Depression started as a reaction to the failure of a policy regime that shared some important convictions with the ‘New Social Democracy’ of our times. Figure 3: A Simple Typology of Social Democratic Policies Macro Liberal Expansionary Restrictive ‘Liberal Social Present Democracy’ (market supporting) ‘Third Way Social Democracy’ Micro Interventionist Golden Age Until the Great (market replacing) ‘Keynesian Social Depression Democracy’ ‘Traditional Social Democracy’ Also the employment growth in present-day UK and USA most likely is more related to a more relaxed macroeconomic framework than to wage differentiation per se. As Soskice (1998) has argued the American federal Reserve has displayed a rather different orientation from the Bundesbank, in the sense that it loosened the reigns as soon as unemployment increased, and growth decreased, whereas the Bundesbank apparently also saw inflationary dangers lurking in recession situation hence making for an overall more restrictive regime (Martin & Notermans 2000). In Britain, the forced departure from the EMU on 16 September 23 1992 provided the impetus for a regime change in monetary policy. Inflation was no longer considered an immediate danger and instead monetary policies were to make a ‘dash for growth’ (Stephens 1996, Ch. 11). Growth picked up almost immediately, and since British government decided not to join EMU for the time being, that new orientation could be maintained, with the result that the overall performance of the British economy since 1992 has been amongst the best in Europe. In sum, without some role for macro, an in particular monetary stimulation social democracy is unlikely to establish a positive some solution on which a durable hegemony could be based. This however does not mean to advocate a return to ‘Keynesian social democracy’. Although common usage, the term Keynesian social democracy is in fact a misnomer as Keynesian deficit spending played only a minor role. The post-war prosperity did not rest on contracyclical spending that kept up total employment in times of depressed private activity, but on vigorous private investment activity, which virtually eliminated any business cycle. The role of Keynesianism in fact comes close to the role of socialist doctrines pre-1930, which played an important ideological role for maintaining the specificity and coherence of social democratic parties but had only limited value in terms of practical policies. Secondly, and more important, the social democratic model of the fifties and sixties did no succumb to neo-liberalism because of economic globalisation or due to a more or less arbitrary shift in economic ideas but to serious endogenous dysfunctionalities. The post-war monetary regime that allowed for a stabilisation of positive expectations of growth relied critically on a set of labour market arrangements that successfully contained inflationary pressures despite fullemployment. Once these arrangements started to fail in the late sixties, tight money and unemployment had to assume the role as safeguards against inflationary excesses. A successful return to ‘Keynesian’ social democracy would hence presuppose a return to the labour market arrangements of that period. Yet those arrangements depended on a degree of deference of the rank and file to both union and party leadership that is inconceivable with the presently much more diversified and individualistic labour force and electorate. Accordingly, market forces will have to provide for a substantial part of the price discipline formerly provided for by bi- or tripartite forms of negotiated wage setting. It is in this 24 context that the single currency, economic integration and a substantial part of the neoliberal legacy of the eighties will play a crucial role for any successful social democratic strategy for growth and full-employment. The elimination of the instrument of devaluation implies that the employment consequences of excessive wage increase in individual member states will be felt immediately; an effect further strengthened by the increased competition resulting from the single market program. Similarly, given an appropriate monetary stimulation, the tight fiscal constraints of the stability pact will prevent governments from trying to compensate for the negative employment consequences of inflationary wage bargaining. Finally also more flexible labour markets will play an important role in stabilising any social democratic growth regime to the extent that they increase the pressure of the unemployed on the wages of the employed and increase the incentives of the unemployed to enter the labour market. Put differently, whereas the neoliberal doctrines of the eighties interpreted flexibilisation and labour market deregulation as sufficient for rekindling growth, in a strategy of liberal social democracy such measures perform the role of protecting macro oriented growth strategies from the inflationary trap in which social democrats fell in the 1970s. The market replacing microeconomic policies of the fifties and sixties generally were justified by a quest for equality but came at the price of isolating large segments from market pressures, and hence directly contributed to the emergence of high unemployment rates as a mechanism for containing inflation. Indeed, especially social democratic parties have developed strongholds in a large and well protected public sector; a sector moreover that frequently was at the forefront of inflationary battles. At a time, however, when the frequently undemocratic process of centralised wage setting with little input from local employers and employees and little concern for local conditions, is a thing of the past, social democrats will have to accept that market forces must play a much larger role in ensuring the compatibility of local autonomy with a growth oriented policy regime. If indeed the removal of class and group privileges is a ideological constant of social democracy (Grundwertekommission 1999: 20) then this will also have to apply to the privileges extended to the social democratic clientele of blue collar and public sector workers when protection from market forces becomes an obstacle to fullemployment. 25 On the other hand, the assignment of microeconomic policies to a counter-inflation role implies a different emphasis from the neoliberal policies of the eighties. To name just two examples: unemployment is not a individual choice resulting from overly generous unemployment benefits. Accordingly cuts in unemployment benefits will do little more than worsen the income situation of the unemployed. Instead the Danish strategy of compulsory participation in extensive retraining programmes couple with a threat of the loss of benefits in case of a refusal to actively seek and accept employment, is both more promising and more equitable.4 Secondly, private sector profitability is a necessary but not sufficient condition for growth. Trying to stimulate growth by additional tax measures intended to improve what overall is a satisfactory profitability in Europe, is little more than an inegalitarian squandering of public money. At the Beginning of a New Social Democratic Century? Not too long ago it seemed that concerning the monetary policies of the ECB the most likely fault lines would pit the German social democrats, joined by the Dutch, against virtually everybody else. As the policies of Schröder and Lafontiane have shown, the SPD is less and less convinced of the wisdom of tight monetary policies. For the party Left around former finance minister Lafontaine the main reason was that, given the sorry state of the German budget, cheap money came to appear as the most promising alternative to wage cutting. As the IG Metall theory that high wages are a precondition for full employment because they force the speed of innovation has obviously failed, the SPD Left has come to advocate a return to Keynesianism and in particular cheaper money. Admittedly the position of the party Left has been seriously weakened since the demise of Lafontaine, but even Chancellor Schröder, who sees much less of a role for macroeconomic expansion, cannot entirely ignore them. Moreover, Schröder is under strong pressure to show some quick results in terms of reducing unemployment in order to be able to commit the trade unions to his core project of a social 4 In the UK it is becoming increasingly clear that cuts in unemployment benefits, even in a buoyant economy, fail to draw many unemployed into employment because the not only lack professional skills but frequently have lost basic social skills, and or have come to suffer from serious health problems (Fischermann 1999). 26 pact. Although not willing to advocating cheap money, the present German government could not be counted on to support a tightly restrictive course on the part of the ECB. As a result, there are presently hardly any social democrats who would openly advocate neo-liberal strategies of tight money. As a result the European social democrats, meeting in Pörtschach in October 1998 could agree to call upon the ECB to lower interest rates. Despite the occasional and modest increases in interest rates, the ECB has not seemed impervious to this political climate as the refusal to defend the parity of the Euro, despite an almost 25% depreciation in relation to the Dollar, would suggest. Moreover, the ECB’s room of maneuver is further tightened by the apparent absence of any inflationary threats in Europe, despite Euro depreciation.. Without domestic inflationary problems soft currency strategies to provoke a cumulative run on the currency. Accordingly the ECB cannot count on international currency movements to provide support against more expansionary-minded social democrats.5 Yet the support for cheap money on the parts of European social democrats seems to be support form a strategy of cheap money under stealth. Admittedly, within all social democratic parties there are those who favor abolishing the independence of the ECB, from reasons ranging from a belief in the Keynesian non-neutrality of money to objection to the undemocratic character of central bank independence. Barring a serious deterioration of the European economy, such a policy, however, will lack the required support amongst the leadership. The social democratic reluctance to openly advocate a switch to a strategy of cheap money is primarily based on the danger that it will provoke a relapse into the bad habits of the seventies, i.e., that building a political majority for a change in monetary policy orientation will imply also a political majority for Keynesian deficit spending and market replacing microeconomic policies. Indeed, the demand for cheaper money is frequently voiced by traditionalists with a strong attachment to the Golden Age social democracy. During his brief stint at the ministry of finance Oskar Lafontaine, e.g., not only called for cheaper money but also for higher wages in order to reduce unemployment by means of higher demand. The latter may be very fit to win the hearts of traditionalist trade unionists and the public sector 5 For a different view see Dyson 1999: 207. 27 employees on the payroll of the minister, it is singularly ill-designed as a measure to promote business confidence and investment. Nevertheless, under social democratic leadership the EU does seem on its way to develop a political counterweight to the ECB which may de facto curtails independence. The Cologne summit of June 1999 has institutionalized a macroeconomic dialogue between the governments the ECB and the social partners, although it should be pointed out that the dialogue in no way binds the ECB, and hence is still far removed from the ‘ex-ante coordination’ which, amongst others, the ETUC desires and the ECB adamantly rejects. In addition the Lisbon summit has given a renewed push in the direction of creating a political counterweight to the ECB, not only by placing the issue of unemployment on top of the agenda, But, more importantly by agreeing upon an institutional framework to monitor the commitments made. Finally, the current Europe weakens is lending increased support to the old French calls for such a counterweight, and indeed the issue will occupy an important place in the French presidency during the second half of 2000. The policy decisions since the launch of the Euro hence would give rise to optimism, although the real test of social democrtt’s adherence to fairly relaxed money may still be ahead, namely if the ECB should decide to halt the slide of the Euro by means of high interest rates. Admittedly, even a return to macroeconomic austerity does not have to spell immediate disaster for social democrats. It will be difficult for its conservative and liberal predecessors to credibly position themselves as the better guarantors of employment and the welfare state. Not only would this require a rejection of their recent policies, it would also involve trying to undo almost a century of image building in democratic polities, in which they have sought to place themselves to the right of social democracy. Such reversals may prove feasible only for nonsocial democratic parties that have found themselves in long-term opposition against an increasingly neo-liberal social democracy. In the present EU this would seem to apply primarily to the Spanish Conservatives. Despite the warning they received at the European elections of 1999 they may therefore nevertheless succeed in national elections Even though they were mainly elected to improve the economic and social security of the electorate a failure to do so would seem unlikely to for the lack of a credible alternative. 28 In the longer run, however, a social democratic EMU fail to address the unsolved problems of the neo-liberal strategies of the eighties and nineties the political cohesion, which as Benjamin Cohen (1994) has pointed out, a monetary union requires for its existence may evaporate (Scharpf 1997: 1). A social democratic zero-sum EMU in which employment can only be had at the cost of larger income differentiation may benefit those right wing extremist who campaign on the theme reserving available jobs for nationals. The Austrian FPÖ and the French Front National, and, have booked significant successes on the basis of election platforms with clear xenophobic, protectionist and anti EU overtones. Despite its successes in Austria and France, right-wing extremism however, has failed to make significant electoral inroads in most European countries. A more serious threat may emergence from a gradual loss of legitimacy of European governance and the concomitant willingness to resort to protectionist measures, which may result if the sacrifices in terms of welfare state cutbacks, reduced job security and increasing earning differential - allegedly imposed by the imperatives of globalisation and Europeanisation - come to be considered excessive by a wide range of the electorate. Invoking the pressures of globalisation may have played a politically useful role for many social democrats in helping to promote necessary reforms against the reluctance of party members and voters. Yet an overly strong emphasis on the impotence of politics in the face of international economic pressures may provoke the reaction of rejecting economic internationalisation, as indeed happened in many cases during the Great Depression. Especially in those countries in which the institutional set-up does not allow for a form of ‘competitive corporatism’ successful in improving external competitiveness, a protectionist response may not be unlikely over the longer run. Moreover, also the problem of increasing tax competition may eventually provoke such responses. Admittedly many social democrats see re-regulation at the European level, i.e., a strengthening of European integration as the appropriate response to a constellation of regulatory and cost competition between the member states with a zero sum framework. As the contributions to this chapter have shown, European social democrats have no common program for economic regulation at EU level. Rather the ongoing high level discussions on ‘progressive governance’ seem to lead to the conclusion that each country should find its own 29 ‘third way’ suitable to its own circumstances. Moreover, given wide divergences of levels of productivity and preferences concerning collective versus individual consumption also within Europe, harmonisation of labour market and welfare state standards would appear undesirable. Indeed it is hard to disagree with the argument that those within especially the social democratic parties of the wealthier EU economies, like e.g., the SPD and PS, who strongly emphasise the need for harmonisation are engaging in a form of protectionism with the effect of preventing the less wealthier members from exploiting their comparative advantage. However, in a world where an appreciate monetary orientation provides growth impulses, as was the case for example during the fifties, employment no longer needs to be considered a zero sum game and free markets can be very well compatible with large differences in welfare state regimes and earning inequalities. In short, macro stimulation may prevent the inevitable disappointment about the inability to transfer the traditional welfare state arrangements of north-western Europe to the EU level from promoting protectionist sentiments. Finally, longer term absence of sufficient GDP growth may increasingly push social democracy towards more inegalitarian solutions. Presently the discussion about the degree of state regulation and income inequality European social democrats should admit’ seems to pit especially the French views (Parti Socialiste 1999) for a more regulated and less inegalitarian social democracy against the British views (Blair & Schröder 1999) in which equality is defined primarily as inclusion (labour market participation) and not income equality. Yet these frontlines may be misleading. As the experience from prolonged and rapid growth of employment in the US has demonstrated, low unemployment in the longer run may be the best remedy against inequality, simply because under longer periods of high employment those with few skills face more opportunities to gain employment and improve their incomes. 6 6 Freeman & Rodgers (1999) find that the tight labour markets in the USA during the 1990s in metropolitan areas has especially benefited the employment and income of young male African Americans whereas the earning of adult men barely changed. Note that many of these African American males were considered unemployable under slack labour market conditions. Similarly Hilary Hoynes’ (1999) study of the US labour market concludes that ‘individuals with lower education levels, nonwhites, and low skill women experience greater cyclical fluctuation 30 Especially if combined with more active labour market policies to upgrade the social and professional skills of the unemployed, the British labour market with its strong employment growth hence may eventually provide better chances for lowering equality. Without a recovery of GDP growth, however, French programs of subsidised low wage unemployment in community services may prove a more inegalitarian solution to the extent that it provides little prospect for advancement and little social security protection of those involved in such projects, while simultaneously shielding a well-protected sector, primarily in public services, from the pressures of unemployment and welfare state cutbacks. Apparently such a solution would be easier to practice for socialist parties like the French who historically have had weak links with industrial labour and draw their main support from middle income professions in the public sector. In sum, far from being a threat, EMU has provided European social democracy with a favourable institutional set-up from which to avoid the main problem that brought down its post-war model, namely the inability to prevent inflation in tight labour markets. Because the increased competition resulting from Europeanisation, combined with the resurgence of negotiated tripartite bargaining in many members countries has reduced the need for unemployment as a guarantor of price stability, the possibilities of a monetary regime in which cheap money again comes to play a crucial role in promoting private sector growth have substantially improved. A return to the monetary policy orientation of the post-war period combined with much of the deregulation and liberalisation measures of the eighties hence may be the key to overcoming a zero sum type situation in which mass-unemployment and low growth threatens to capture European social democracy. Admittedly, also on the bases of low growth many social democratic parties may be able to defend their present position of dominance. Yet such successes are more likely to remain politically contested. What trajectory European social democracy will travel will, as has been the case fore most of its history, the result of its own political choices. than high skill men.’ 31 References Blair, Tony & Gerhard Schröder (1999), ‘Europe: The Third Way / Die Neue Mitte.’ http://www.labour.org.uk/views/items/00000053.html Bobbio, Norberto (1996), Left and Right. Cambridge: Polity Press. Cohen, Benjamin J. (1994), ‘Beyond EMU: The Problem of Sustainability.’ In: Barry Eichengreen & Jeffry Frieden, eds., The Political Economy of European Monetary Unification. Boulder: Westview Press. Cox, Robert Henry (1998), ‘From Safety Net to Trampoline: Labour Market Activation in the Netherlands and Denmark.’ Governance, 11(4):397-414. Crafts, Nicholas & Gianni Toniolo (1996), “Postwar Growth: An Overview.” In Nicholas Crafts & Gianni Toniolo, eds., Economic Growth In Europe Since 1945. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. De Beus, Jos (2000A), ‘EMU and the European Model of Society – The Dutch Case.’ Forthcoming in: George Ross & Andrew Martin, eds., EMU and the European Model of Society. de Beus, Jos (2000B), “Are Third Way Social Democrats Friends or Enemies of European Integration?’ Mimeo. Dyson, Kenneth & Kevin Featherstone (1996), “Italy and EMU as a ‘Vincolo Esterno’: Empowering the Technocrats, Transforming the State. South European Society & Politics, Vol. 1, No.2: 272-299. Dyson, Kenneth (1999), “Benign or Malevolent Leviathan? Social Democratic Governments in a Neo-Liberal Euro Area.” Political Quarterly, 70(2): 195-209. Farmer, Roger (1999), Macroeconomics of Self-Fulfilling prophecies. Cambridge MA: MIT Press. Fischermann, Thomas (1999), ‘Unerfreulicher Zyklus.’ Die Zeit, Nr. 44, 28 October. Freeman, Richard (1997), ‘Are Norway’s Solidaristic and Welfares State Policies Viable in the Modern Global economy?’ In: Jon Erik Dølvik & Arild H. Steen, eds, Making Solidarity Work?. Oslo: Scandinavian University Press. Freeman, Richard B. & William M. Rodgers III (1999), ‘Area Economic Conditions and the Labour Market Outcomes of Young Men in the 1990s Expansion.’ National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper 7073. Grundwertekommission beim Parteivorstand der SPD (1999) Dritte Wege – Neue Mitte. Berlin: SPD. 32 Hoynes, Hilary (1999), ‘The Employment, Earnings, and Income of Less Skilled Workers over the Business Cycle.’ National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper 7188. Krugman, Paul (1996), Pop Internationalism. Cambridge MA: MIT Press. Martin, Andrew & Ton Notermans (2000), ‘EMU, Macroeconomic Regimes, and the European Model of Society.’ In: George Ross & Andrew Martin, eds., EMU and the European Model of Society. Forthcoming. Notermans, Ton (1999), “Policy Continuity, Policy Change, and the Political Power of Economic Ideas.” Acta Politica 1999/3: 22-48. Oatley, Thomas (1997), Monetary Politics. Exchange Rate Cooperation in the European Union. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. Parti Socialiste (1999), Auf dem Weg zu einer gerechteren Welt. [Pour un monde plus juste.] http://www.spd.de/politik/erneuerung/jospin/index.html. Rhodes Martin (2000a), ‘Globalisation, Welfare States and Employment: Is There a European ‘Third Way’?’ Forthcoming in: Nancy Bermeo, ed., Unemployment in the New Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Rhodes Martin (2000b), ‘The Political Economy of Social Pacts: ‘Competitive Corporatism’ and European Welfare Reform’. Forthcoming in: Paul Pierson, ed., The New Politics of the Welfare State. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Scharpf, Fritz W. (1996), ‘Negative and Positive Integration in the Political Economy of European Welfare States.’ In: Gary Marks, Fritz W. Scharpf, Philippe Schmitter & Wolfgang Streeck, Governance in the European Union. London: SAGE. Scharpf, Fritz W. (1997), “Combating Unemployment in Continental Europe. Policy Options Under Internationalization.” Robert Schuman Centre Policy Papers. Schettkat, Ronald (1999), “Small Economy Macroeconomics. The Economic Success of Ireland, Denmark, Austria and the Netherlands Compared.” Intereconomics, July/August: 159-170. Soskice, David (1998) The Future Political Economy of EMU. Rethinking the Effects of Monetary Integration on Europe. Mimeo: Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin. Stephens, Philip (1996), Politics and the Pound. London: Macmillan. Visser, Jelle & Anton Hemerijck (1997), ‘A Dutch Miracle’ Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press. 33