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FLEXICURITY AND THE FUTURE OF WORK:
LESSONS FROM DENMARK
Anna Ilsøe & Trine Pernille Larsen
June 2023
• Introducing Danish flexicurity
• Differences and similarities between Denmark and the UK
• Lessons for the future – what can we learn from Danish flexicurity?
OUTLINE
DANISH FLEXICURITY - KEY FEATURES
• Describes balances btw. flexibility & security on the labour market
• Assumes: flexibility & security policies- can be united btw. employers &
employees
Main argument: economic growth & competitiveness depend on high levels
of labour market flexibility combined with high degrees of social security
DANISH FLEXICURITY – THE GOLDEN TRIANGLE
External numerical
flexibility: liberal
hire/fire rules
Relatively high
unemployment benefits
Active labour market
policy
Source: Bredgaard et al. 2005
Motivation
Qualification
DANISH FLEXICURITY - DEFINITION
1) A combination of flexibility for employers and security for employees, implying a degree of
trade-off
2) This combination produces advantages for both employers and employees – so this is a positive
sum, rather than a zero-sum, game;
3) The degree of flexibility and security balance each other in a meaningful way, in depth, scope
and length
• depth refers to the extent of flexibility and security
• scope relates to which groups of workers are covered
• length refers to time, such as whether the flexibility and security occur simultaneously
Source: Ilsøe 2007
KEY FEATURES OF THE DANISH UNEMPLOYMENT
AND SOCIAL ASSISTANCE SYSTEMS
Unemployment benefit Social assistance
Underlying logic:
Insurance based:
membership of unemployment insurance
scheme
Citizen-based: universal
Income security:
Coverage rate:
Earnings related
75%
(non-standard workers: 55%)
Income-based: residual
All
Eligibility criteria:
Criteria for accrued
hours/income:
1 years membership
Workers: 1924 accrued working hours – last 3
years
(part-time insured: 1258 hours)
Self-employed: company closure & min. Income
€871.69 per month- last three years
Age: 30+ years
Assets: Less than 10.000 DKK/
€1342
Without rights to other social benefits
225 hours of paid work
Source: Larsen & Ilsøe 2023
A COMPARISON OF FLEXIBILITY AND SECURITY IN
DENMARK AND THE UK
Denmark UK
External numerical flexibility EPL: 1.5 EPL: 1.4
Income security
(unemployment benefits)
Coverage rate: 87 %
Replacement rate: 57 %
Coverage rate: 100 %
Replacement rate: 35 %
Active Labour Market Policies (expenditure as
percentage of GDP) 1.2 % 0.3 %
Employment rate 77 % 76 %
Unemployment rate 4.5 % 3.6 %
Long-term unemployment rate 0,5 % 1,2 %
Job to job mobility 10,7 % 11,3 %
EPL: Employment Protection Legislation Indicator. Low value means easy legal access to hiring and firing. (2019)
Job to job mobility: share of employed who changed jobs within the last year (2019). Source: Eurostat/LFS.
Coverage rate: share of workers covered by the unemployment insurance (2020)
Replacement rate: average replacement of former earnings via unemployment benefit including housing benefit (2022)
ALMP expenditure (2018)
Employment and unemployment rates (share of working population aged 15-64 years) (Q3 2022)
Source: OECD; Danske A-kasser.
THE DEVELOPMENT IN REPLACEMENT RATES: DENMARK,
THE UK, FRANCE AND GERMANY
Source: OECD. Figures are for a single person earning the average wage, without children, for a duration of 2 months, including
housing benefits and social assistance benefits.
DIFFERENT MEASURES OF NON-STANDARD WORK CONTRACTS
AS SHARE OF THE WORKING AGE POPULATION (15-64): DENMARK
Source: Rasmussen et al., 2021 and Authors own calculations based on Statistics Denmark, The Danish Labour Force
Survey, and Eurostat.
INTRODUCING CONTRACTUAL FLEXIBILITY
Contractual flexibility – a definition:
• Usage of contracts deviating from what is considered the traditional standard employment (the
full-time open-ended position with 30+ hours per week).
• Three main flexibility dimensions besides liberal hire/fire rules:
• Employment status: distinction between different forms of self-employment vis a vis the
traditional employee status
• Contract length: open-ended vis a vis temporary contracts
• Working time: number of working hours guaranteed are fewer than standard hours (30+
hours per week)
RECENT SURVEY (LARSEN ET AL. 2022): FROM NUMERICAL
FLEXIBILITY TOWARDS CONTRACTUAL FLEXIBILITY
• One in three non-standard workers on DK-labour
market- (LFS-data) – increased from 26% in 2000
• One in two of low wage workers (our survey)
• Marked sector variations
• Non-standard work esp. high in private services
53
16
30
22
61
27
35
31
48
44
33
76
39
27
34
74
47
56
63
76
65
50
0 20 40 60 80
Agriculture, forestry & fishing
Manufacturing
Construction
Transport
Hotels & restaurants
Public and Private administration &IT
Education
Health- & social care
Creative industries
Other
Total - general average
Own survey among low wage workers Non-standard workers
LFS-data Non-standard workers
Non-standard workers as share of all employed on the
Danish labour market aged 15-64 years, in percent
Source: Larsen et al. 2022.
RECENT SURVEY (LARSEN ET AL. 2022): INCOME
SECURITY – A PATCHY SAFETY NET
Many non-insured in case of unemployment – 45% - lower among
some groups
Many struggle to qualify for unemployment benefit, if insured:
• Not enough hours to meet minimum threshold for accrued working
hours
• Unpaid work widespread- one in three – higher among some groups
• Unpaid work – does not account towards accrued working hours
86
55
61
32
59
40
35
73
47
55
0 20 40 60 80 100
Full-time open-ended
contracts
Non-standard workers
Long part-time (16-30
hours)
Marginal part-time
work (less than 15…
Fixed-term contracts
Solo self-employed
Zero-hour contracts
Subcontracted workers
Students and people
on social benefits…
Students and people
on social benefits…
Membership of an unemployment benefit scheme,
Source: Larsen et al. 2022.
FLEXICURITY 2.0 (ILSØE & LARSEN 2022): REVISITING THE
GOLDEN TRIANGLE FROM A NON-STANDARD WORKERS
PERSPECTIVE
Contractual flexibility:
Shifts between work
tasks, odd jobs &
projects
Insurance based schemes,
changes to social protection –
legal extension & compulsory
membership or new eligibility
criteria?
Private education, online
courses, changes to further
training systems?
Source: Ilsøe & Larsen 2022.
SUMMING UP
• Danish flexicurity has been a success: combining high levels of numerical
flexibility with comparatively high levels of income security
• The Danish labour market is as flexible as the UK labour market (job
mobility, employment, unemployment)
• Recent trend in Denmark: employers increasingly utilise contractual
flexibility (employment status, contract length & working hours)
• The most flexible workers - non-standard workers - less covered by the
security elements in the Danish flexicurity model
• Calls for revitalising the Danish flexicurity model
FURTHER READINGS
Ilsøe A and Larsen TP (2023): Flexicurity and the future of work – lessons from Denmark. In Gavin K and
McCurdy C (eds.) (2023): The Economy 2030 Inquiry. London: The Resolution Foundation.
https://economy2030.resolutionfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Flexicurity-and-the-
future-of-work.pdf
Ilsøe, A and Larsen, TP (eds.) (2021): Non-standard work in the Nordics – troubled waters under the still
surface. TemaNord No. 503. Copenhagen: The Nordic Councils of Ministers, 251 pages.
http://norden.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:1525814/FULLTEXT01.pdf
Ilsøe A (2008): ‘The Danish Flexicurity Model - a Lesson for the US?’ in Hendrickx, Frank (ed.): Flexicurity
and the Lisbon Agenda. A Cross-Disciplinary Reflection. Social Europe Series vol. 17. Antwerp: Intersentia,
pp. 65-104. https://faos.ku.dk/english/pdf/publications/2007/fnotat81.pdf
Risk reduction
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Risk reduction

  • 11.
  • 13. FLEXICURITY AND THE FUTURE OF WORK: LESSONS FROM DENMARK Anna Ilsøe & Trine Pernille Larsen June 2023
  • 14. • Introducing Danish flexicurity • Differences and similarities between Denmark and the UK • Lessons for the future – what can we learn from Danish flexicurity? OUTLINE
  • 15. DANISH FLEXICURITY - KEY FEATURES • Describes balances btw. flexibility & security on the labour market • Assumes: flexibility & security policies- can be united btw. employers & employees Main argument: economic growth & competitiveness depend on high levels of labour market flexibility combined with high degrees of social security
  • 16. DANISH FLEXICURITY – THE GOLDEN TRIANGLE External numerical flexibility: liberal hire/fire rules Relatively high unemployment benefits Active labour market policy Source: Bredgaard et al. 2005 Motivation Qualification
  • 17. DANISH FLEXICURITY - DEFINITION 1) A combination of flexibility for employers and security for employees, implying a degree of trade-off 2) This combination produces advantages for both employers and employees – so this is a positive sum, rather than a zero-sum, game; 3) The degree of flexibility and security balance each other in a meaningful way, in depth, scope and length • depth refers to the extent of flexibility and security • scope relates to which groups of workers are covered • length refers to time, such as whether the flexibility and security occur simultaneously Source: Ilsøe 2007
  • 18. KEY FEATURES OF THE DANISH UNEMPLOYMENT AND SOCIAL ASSISTANCE SYSTEMS Unemployment benefit Social assistance Underlying logic: Insurance based: membership of unemployment insurance scheme Citizen-based: universal Income security: Coverage rate: Earnings related 75% (non-standard workers: 55%) Income-based: residual All Eligibility criteria: Criteria for accrued hours/income: 1 years membership Workers: 1924 accrued working hours – last 3 years (part-time insured: 1258 hours) Self-employed: company closure & min. Income €871.69 per month- last three years Age: 30+ years Assets: Less than 10.000 DKK/ €1342 Without rights to other social benefits 225 hours of paid work Source: Larsen & Ilsøe 2023
  • 19. A COMPARISON OF FLEXIBILITY AND SECURITY IN DENMARK AND THE UK Denmark UK External numerical flexibility EPL: 1.5 EPL: 1.4 Income security (unemployment benefits) Coverage rate: 87 % Replacement rate: 57 % Coverage rate: 100 % Replacement rate: 35 % Active Labour Market Policies (expenditure as percentage of GDP) 1.2 % 0.3 % Employment rate 77 % 76 % Unemployment rate 4.5 % 3.6 % Long-term unemployment rate 0,5 % 1,2 % Job to job mobility 10,7 % 11,3 % EPL: Employment Protection Legislation Indicator. Low value means easy legal access to hiring and firing. (2019) Job to job mobility: share of employed who changed jobs within the last year (2019). Source: Eurostat/LFS. Coverage rate: share of workers covered by the unemployment insurance (2020) Replacement rate: average replacement of former earnings via unemployment benefit including housing benefit (2022) ALMP expenditure (2018) Employment and unemployment rates (share of working population aged 15-64 years) (Q3 2022) Source: OECD; Danske A-kasser.
  • 20. THE DEVELOPMENT IN REPLACEMENT RATES: DENMARK, THE UK, FRANCE AND GERMANY Source: OECD. Figures are for a single person earning the average wage, without children, for a duration of 2 months, including housing benefits and social assistance benefits.
  • 21. DIFFERENT MEASURES OF NON-STANDARD WORK CONTRACTS AS SHARE OF THE WORKING AGE POPULATION (15-64): DENMARK Source: Rasmussen et al., 2021 and Authors own calculations based on Statistics Denmark, The Danish Labour Force Survey, and Eurostat.
  • 22. INTRODUCING CONTRACTUAL FLEXIBILITY Contractual flexibility – a definition: • Usage of contracts deviating from what is considered the traditional standard employment (the full-time open-ended position with 30+ hours per week). • Three main flexibility dimensions besides liberal hire/fire rules: • Employment status: distinction between different forms of self-employment vis a vis the traditional employee status • Contract length: open-ended vis a vis temporary contracts • Working time: number of working hours guaranteed are fewer than standard hours (30+ hours per week)
  • 23. RECENT SURVEY (LARSEN ET AL. 2022): FROM NUMERICAL FLEXIBILITY TOWARDS CONTRACTUAL FLEXIBILITY • One in three non-standard workers on DK-labour market- (LFS-data) – increased from 26% in 2000 • One in two of low wage workers (our survey) • Marked sector variations • Non-standard work esp. high in private services 53 16 30 22 61 27 35 31 48 44 33 76 39 27 34 74 47 56 63 76 65 50 0 20 40 60 80 Agriculture, forestry & fishing Manufacturing Construction Transport Hotels & restaurants Public and Private administration &IT Education Health- & social care Creative industries Other Total - general average Own survey among low wage workers Non-standard workers LFS-data Non-standard workers Non-standard workers as share of all employed on the Danish labour market aged 15-64 years, in percent Source: Larsen et al. 2022.
  • 24. RECENT SURVEY (LARSEN ET AL. 2022): INCOME SECURITY – A PATCHY SAFETY NET Many non-insured in case of unemployment – 45% - lower among some groups Many struggle to qualify for unemployment benefit, if insured: • Not enough hours to meet minimum threshold for accrued working hours • Unpaid work widespread- one in three – higher among some groups • Unpaid work – does not account towards accrued working hours 86 55 61 32 59 40 35 73 47 55 0 20 40 60 80 100 Full-time open-ended contracts Non-standard workers Long part-time (16-30 hours) Marginal part-time work (less than 15… Fixed-term contracts Solo self-employed Zero-hour contracts Subcontracted workers Students and people on social benefits… Students and people on social benefits… Membership of an unemployment benefit scheme, Source: Larsen et al. 2022.
  • 25. FLEXICURITY 2.0 (ILSØE & LARSEN 2022): REVISITING THE GOLDEN TRIANGLE FROM A NON-STANDARD WORKERS PERSPECTIVE Contractual flexibility: Shifts between work tasks, odd jobs & projects Insurance based schemes, changes to social protection – legal extension & compulsory membership or new eligibility criteria? Private education, online courses, changes to further training systems? Source: Ilsøe & Larsen 2022.
  • 26. SUMMING UP • Danish flexicurity has been a success: combining high levels of numerical flexibility with comparatively high levels of income security • The Danish labour market is as flexible as the UK labour market (job mobility, employment, unemployment) • Recent trend in Denmark: employers increasingly utilise contractual flexibility (employment status, contract length & working hours) • The most flexible workers - non-standard workers - less covered by the security elements in the Danish flexicurity model • Calls for revitalising the Danish flexicurity model
  • 27. FURTHER READINGS Ilsøe A and Larsen TP (2023): Flexicurity and the future of work – lessons from Denmark. In Gavin K and McCurdy C (eds.) (2023): The Economy 2030 Inquiry. London: The Resolution Foundation. https://economy2030.resolutionfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Flexicurity-and-the- future-of-work.pdf Ilsøe, A and Larsen, TP (eds.) (2021): Non-standard work in the Nordics – troubled waters under the still surface. TemaNord No. 503. Copenhagen: The Nordic Councils of Ministers, 251 pages. http://norden.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:1525814/FULLTEXT01.pdf Ilsøe A (2008): ‘The Danish Flexicurity Model - a Lesson for the US?’ in Hendrickx, Frank (ed.): Flexicurity and the Lisbon Agenda. A Cross-Disciplinary Reflection. Social Europe Series vol. 17. Antwerp: Intersentia, pp. 65-104. https://faos.ku.dk/english/pdf/publications/2007/fnotat81.pdf