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92 records from EconBiz based on author Name
1. Cui bono : business or labour? : job retention policies during the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe
Ebbinghaus, Bernhard; Lehner, Lukas;2022
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link Link
Citations: 18 (based on OpenCitations)
2. Poverty in old age
abstractWhile the financial sustainability of pension systems has been high on reform agendas, the adequacy of retirement incomes has only recently come into focus. This chapter analyses old-age poverty from a comparative and longitudinal perspective using repeated waves of cross-sectional micro-level income data from the Luxembourg Income Study (LIS). We focus on high-income OECD countries that experienced demographic ageing and substantial pension reforms since the mid-1980s, and analyse old age poverty in terms of relative income positions and purchasing capacity. Overall, there has been a secular trend towards a decline in old age poverty, which has converged towards the poverty rates observed in the working age population. However, since ongoing pension reforms in several countries have reduced public benefits, fostered prefunded savings, augmented the retirement age, and strengthened the link between contribution histories and old-age incomes, we identify population subgroups that have difficulties in gaining sufficient pension credits or savings into individual pension plans during their working lives to escape poverty in old age, including women, migrants, and those with lower education. We also present examples of poverty trends across synthetic cohorts in old age. Overall, we observe that more recent cohorts are better protected against poverty in old age compared to cohorts that were born longer ago.
Ebbinghaus, Bernhard; Nelson, Kenneth E.; Nieuwenhuis, Rense;2019
Type: Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature; Arbeitspapier; Working Paper;
Availability:

3. The role of social partners in managing Europe's great recession : crisis corporatism or corporatism in crisis?
abstractIntroduction : studying social concertation in Europe / Bernhard Ebbinghaus and J. Timo Weishaupt -- Social concertation in Europe during the great recession : exploring when governments include social partners in crisis management / Benedikt Bender and Bernhard Ebbinghaus -- Back to the future : Germany's turn to neo-corporatism in times of crisis / J. Timo Weishaupt -- Wage autonomy, political reforms and the absence of social pacts in Denmark / Bjarke Refslund and Jens Lind -- Crisis management in the Netherlands : social concertation and constructive opposition / Marc van der Meer, Anton Hemerijck and Jan Karremans -- Unilateral crisis prevention and crumbling social partnership in Poland / Adam Mrozowicki and Jan Czarzasty -- The rise and fall of Irish social partnership / Aidan Regan -- The decline of social concertation or the crumbling pillars of legitimacy in Spain / Oscar Molina -- A biased pendulum : Italy's oscillations between concertation and disintermediation / Arianna Tassinari and Stefano Sacchi -- The crisis and the changing nature of political exchange in Slovenia / Miroslav Stanojević and Alenka Krašovec -- Conflict or cooperation? : explaining the European Commission's and social partners' preferences for low-level social dialogue / Vincent Lindner -- Social concertation at a cross-road : crisis corporatism or corporatism in crisis? / Bernhard Ebbinghaus and J. Timo Weishaupt -- Postscript : social partnership facing the 2020 Coronavirus pandemic / Bernhard Ebbinghaus and J. Timo Weishaupt.
Ebbinghaus, Bernhard; Weishaupt, J. Timo;2022
Type: Aufsatzsammlung; Beiträge
4. Readjusting unemployment protection in Europe : how crises reshape varieties of labour market regimes
Ebbinghaus, Bernhard; Weishaupt, J. Timo;2022
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability: Link Link Link
Citations: 2 (based on OpenCitations)
5. Accumulation or absorption? : changing disparities of household non-employment in Europe during the Great Recession
Biegert, Thomas; Ebbinghaus, Bernhard;2022
Type: Aufsatz in Zeitschrift; Article in journal;
Availability:

Citations: 4 (based on OpenCitations)
6. Employment Regulation and Labor Market Policy in Germany, 1991-2005
abstractThe paper provides an overview of institutional provisions and reforms regarding employment protection, active and passive labor market policies in Germany as well as of actors' responsibilities in these areas. It covers the period between the early 1990s and the most recent Hartz reforms. Empirical data on labor market outcomes with respect to the levels and structures of both employment and unemployment complements this study
Ebbinghaus, Bernhard; Eichhorst, Werner;2021
Availability: Link Link
Citations: 7 (based on OpenCitations)
7. Public opinion towards labour market reforms in Europe : a multidimensional and dynamic perspective on attitudes
Buss, Christopher; Ebbinghaus, Bernhard;2017
Type: Hochschulschrift; Aufsatzsammlung; Beiträge
Availability: Link Link Link
8. Beveridge and Bismarck remodelled : the positions of British and German organised interests on pension reform
Klitzke, Julia; Ebbinghaus, Bernhard;2016
Type: Hochschulschrift; Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature;
Availability: Link Link Link
9. Pension systems and income inequality among the elderly in Europe
Neugschwender, Jörg; Ebbinghaus, Bernhard;2016
Type: Hochschulschrift; Graue Literatur; Non-commercial literature;
Availability: Link Link Link
10. Between state and market: the changing role of institutions and political actors in East European pension reforms
abstractHow did pension systems in CEE changed over the past decades? What explains the variation in reform choices between political regimes in the region? Why some countries have chosen to introduce mandatory private accounts whereas others have opted only for parametric reforms? This dissertation answers these questions arguing that the compromises forged between national elites and international actors around key institutional elements of pension systems explain the growing diversity in welfare state pathways in CEE. In particular, it shows that whereas International Financial Institutions (IFIs) such as the World Bank have prioritized parametric adjustments aimed at ensuring the long-term fiscal sustainability of public pension systems together with an agenda of privatization, national elites promoted reforms that focused predominantly on short-term goals. Furthermore, it argues that, an analysis of the wider group of CEE countries over a time–span that includes both the expansion and the contraction phases of the mandatory funded pillars in the region, shows that, on average, the more authoritarian countries were less likely to privatize their pension systems. It shows that the type of the regime that emerged during transition has impacted the responsiveness of national elites to the agenda of pension reform promoted by IFIs as well as the political sustainability of pension reforms. In particular, in the case of authoritarian countries, the choice of pension reforms was linked to the importance of pensioner constituencies for the survival of the regime. In contrast, in more democratic regimes, pension reforms were carried out by taking into account the interests of different societal groups, and depended on the political compromises that were forged between policy makers and societal constituents. Still, a commonality between pension policy-making in authoritarian and non-authoritarian regimes was that ultimately national executives could pursue an agenda of reforms that was disconnected from the interests of societal stakeholders. Thus oftentimes, the interests of trade unions or pensioner associations were sidelined when passing pension reforms.
Adascalitei, Dragos; Ebbinghaus, Bernhard;2016
Type: Hochschulschrift; Aufsatzsammlung; Beiträge
Availability: Link Link Link