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The End of the Rhineland Model? Changing Labour Relations in Germany - Evidence from the Minimum Wage Debate
thesis
posted on 2021-11-15, 05:58 authored by Reiling, PascalHypothesis: Effects of globalisation, European Integration and re-unification have pushed the German political economy away from its unique institutional setting, framed as Rhineland Capitalism or the Rhineland Model. Legislative decisions in the last years and current positions of politicoeconomic actors in wage setting mechanisms - a distinctive part of the Rhineland Model - seem to foster that shift and illustrate the incremental 'Anglo-Saxonisation' of the German political economy.
History
Copyright Date
2010-01-01Date of Award
2010-01-01Publisher
Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of WellingtonRights License
Author Retains CopyrightDegree Discipline
International RelationsDegree Grantor
Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of WellingtonDegree Level
MastersDegree Name
Master of International RelationsVictoria University of Wellington Item Type
Awarded Research Masters ThesisLanguage
en_NZVictoria University of Wellington School
School of History, Philosophy, Political Science and International RelationsAdvisors
Leslie, JohnUsage metrics
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Keywords
German labour relationsLiberal convergenceInstitutional changeSchool: School of History, Philosophy, Political Science and International Relations160607 International RelationsMarsden: 360105 International relationsDegree Discipline: International RelationsDegree Level: MastersDegree Name: Master of International RelationsInternational Relations
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