The Role of the OECD and the EU in the Development of Labour Market Policy in the Czech Republic

This article analyses the role of the OECD through its “Jobs Strategy” and the European Union (EU) through the “European Employment Strategy” in the development of macro-economic, employment and labour market policy in the Czech Republic. As a full member of the two organisations, the Czech Republic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Caroline Anne de la Porte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UACES 2009-12-01
Series:Journal of Contemporary European Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/232
id doaj-aa55e513cdd741ce8c64590ffba72032
record_format Article
spelling doaj-aa55e513cdd741ce8c64590ffba720322020-11-25T04:08:32ZengUACESJournal of Contemporary European Research1815-347X2009-12-0154The Role of the OECD and the EU in the Development of Labour Market Policy in the Czech RepublicCaroline Anne de la Porte0University of Southern DenmarkThis article analyses the role of the OECD through its “Jobs Strategy” and the European Union (EU) through the “European Employment Strategy” in the development of macro-economic, employment and labour market policy in the Czech Republic. As a full member of the two organisations, the Czech Republic has been subject to their soft non-binding policy advice in the area of labour market reform. The OECD and EU policy models are similar, both insisting on growth-oriented macro-economic policy, supported by active labour market policies, an active and effective public employment service (PES) and the de-regulation of labour markets. However, the OECD actively advocates private actor involvement in labour markets, while the EU insists on the role of the public sector. The inquisitive styles of the two organisations differ: the OECD has a decontextualised and quantified analysis of performance accompanied by a supportive in-depth qualitative analysis, while the EU has a more contextualised analysis, which is also more politicised. However, the EU’s policy is partially supported by European structural funds, while the OECD has no comparable instrument. Despite some differences in policy model and inquisitive style, both the OECD and the EU have given the same major policy recommendations over time to the Czech Republic, although the OECD has insisted more on de-regulation, whereas the EU has also emphasised worker security and anti-discrimination. In macro-economic policy, de-regulation and increasing flexibility on the labour market, the Czech Republic conforms with OECD and EU policy models and recommendations. The PES has been developed institutionally to fit both models. However, activation, shifts in expenditure from passive to active labour market policy, training and placement of the PES have not changed substantially since the Czech Republic became member of the EU, suggesting that the real impact of the OECD and the EU has been weak.https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/232Lisbon strategypolicy coordinationemployment policypolicy framinginstitutional capabilities
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Caroline Anne de la Porte
spellingShingle Caroline Anne de la Porte
The Role of the OECD and the EU in the Development of Labour Market Policy in the Czech Republic
Journal of Contemporary European Research
Lisbon strategy
policy coordination
employment policy
policy framing
institutional capabilities
author_facet Caroline Anne de la Porte
author_sort Caroline Anne de la Porte
title The Role of the OECD and the EU in the Development of Labour Market Policy in the Czech Republic
title_short The Role of the OECD and the EU in the Development of Labour Market Policy in the Czech Republic
title_full The Role of the OECD and the EU in the Development of Labour Market Policy in the Czech Republic
title_fullStr The Role of the OECD and the EU in the Development of Labour Market Policy in the Czech Republic
title_full_unstemmed The Role of the OECD and the EU in the Development of Labour Market Policy in the Czech Republic
title_sort role of the oecd and the eu in the development of labour market policy in the czech republic
publisher UACES
series Journal of Contemporary European Research
issn 1815-347X
publishDate 2009-12-01
description This article analyses the role of the OECD through its “Jobs Strategy” and the European Union (EU) through the “European Employment Strategy” in the development of macro-economic, employment and labour market policy in the Czech Republic. As a full member of the two organisations, the Czech Republic has been subject to their soft non-binding policy advice in the area of labour market reform. The OECD and EU policy models are similar, both insisting on growth-oriented macro-economic policy, supported by active labour market policies, an active and effective public employment service (PES) and the de-regulation of labour markets. However, the OECD actively advocates private actor involvement in labour markets, while the EU insists on the role of the public sector. The inquisitive styles of the two organisations differ: the OECD has a decontextualised and quantified analysis of performance accompanied by a supportive in-depth qualitative analysis, while the EU has a more contextualised analysis, which is also more politicised. However, the EU’s policy is partially supported by European structural funds, while the OECD has no comparable instrument. Despite some differences in policy model and inquisitive style, both the OECD and the EU have given the same major policy recommendations over time to the Czech Republic, although the OECD has insisted more on de-regulation, whereas the EU has also emphasised worker security and anti-discrimination. In macro-economic policy, de-regulation and increasing flexibility on the labour market, the Czech Republic conforms with OECD and EU policy models and recommendations. The PES has been developed institutionally to fit both models. However, activation, shifts in expenditure from passive to active labour market policy, training and placement of the PES have not changed substantially since the Czech Republic became member of the EU, suggesting that the real impact of the OECD and the EU has been weak.
topic Lisbon strategy
policy coordination
employment policy
policy framing
institutional capabilities
url https://jcer.net/index.php/jcer/article/view/232
work_keys_str_mv AT carolineannedelaporte theroleoftheoecdandtheeuinthedevelopmentoflabourmarketpolicyintheczechrepublic
AT carolineannedelaporte roleoftheoecdandtheeuinthedevelopmentoflabourmarketpolicyintheczechrepublic
_version_ 1724425238768254976