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December 10, 2018

[SSJ: 10483] Lecture on December 14, 6:00 P.M. Labour Market Liberalisation: Comparing France, Germany, and Japan

From: DIJ Tokyo <dijtokyo@dijtokyo.org>
Date: 2018/12/07

You are cordially invited to the next DIJ Roundtable on



Friday, December 14, 18:00 - 19:30h
Labour Market Liberalisation after the Lehman Crisis: Comparing France, Germany and Japan



Bruno Amable (Geneva), Paul Marx (Duisburg), Mari Miura (Tokyo)



10 years after the collapse of the investment firm Lehman Brothers, a shift in discourses on structural labour market reforms is becoming ever more visible. Whereas before the crash many experts and policymakers had argued that market-oriented reforms were necessary to improve labour market and economic performance, the social costs of liberalisation now seem to attract much more attention.

Yet the jury is still out on whether this discursive shift has prompted a similar change in policy. While policies emphasising social equality appear to have gained in popularity (e.g. minimum wages, equal treatment for non-standard workers), structural reforms echoing liberalisation are also still on the agenda (e.g. French reforms of labour contract law).
This event aims to shed light on this mixed picture of continuity and change by bringing together three renowned scholars from France, Germany, and Japan for a roundtable discussion. They will discuss whether and to what extent the Lehman crisis (a.k.a. the global financial crisis) has indeed led to a lasting reorientation of labour market policy and politics.


Bruno Amable is professor of economics at the University of Geneva. He is an expert on the varieties of capitalism, institutions and their influence on innovation and industries. In recent years, he has further expanded his research focus on labour markets, European structural reforms and employment policy.Paul Marx is professor of political science and socio-economics at the University of Duisburg-Essen and affiliated with the Danish Centre for Welfare Studies and the IZA Institute of Labour Economics. His interests include social and political inequality, political behaviour, and welfare state and labour market analysis.


Mari Miura is professor of political science at Sophia University in Tokyo and academic advisor to the All-partisan Caucus for the Promotion of Gender Equality in Politics. She is well-known for her research on gender equality and labour politics in Japan. She is the author of Welfare through work: Conservative ideas, partisan dynamics, and social protection in Japan (Cornell, 2012).



Presentations and Q&A are in English. The Roundtable will be followed by a buffet reception. Admission is free. There is only a limited number of seats for this event, so early registration via roundtable@dijtokyo.org <mailto:roundtable@dijtokyo.org> is required and will be confirmed. Thank you for your understanding.



Deutsches Institut für Japanstudien - German Institute for Japanese Studies

www.dijtokyo.org Tel: 03-3222-5198

Approved by ssjmod at 12:07 PM