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(Re)making labour markets and economic crises: The case of Ireland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2023

Enda Murphy*
Affiliation:
University College Dublin, Ireland
Julien Mercille
Affiliation:
University College Dublin, Ireland
*
Enda Murphy, School of Architecture, Planning & Environmental Policy, University College Dublin, Planning Building, Dublin 4, D04 V1W8, Ireland. Email: enda.murphy@ucd.ie

Abstract

The 2008 economic crisis has had significant impacts on labour markets around the world. In Europe, in particular, the need for internal devaluation within European Union nations in financial difficulty precipitated a wave of labour market reforms alongside the reform of welfare systems struggling to cope with high levels of unemployment. Various analyses have explored the nature of these changes separately for the labour market and welfare systems. Using a conceptual framework rooted in a political economy understanding the social nature of labour, this article takes an inclusive approach to understanding regulatory changes for both employed and unemployed labour. We do this using the case of Ireland, a country that went through a severe economic crisis, was subject to a European Union/European Central Bank/International Monetary Fund bailout in 2010 and witnessed one of the most significant labour market crises in Europe. The Irish case is instructive because it highlights both the range and depth of regulatory interventions utilised by the state during periods of crisis to deal with the social nature of labour and its role under advanced capitalism.

Type
Post-crisis rebuilding: national perspectives
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2019

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