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Socio-Economic Review Advance Access originally published online on July 27, 2006
Socio-Economic Review 2007 5(2):233-260; doi:10.1093/ser/mwl019
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© The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press and the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Patterns of labour market integration in Europe—a life course perspective on time policies

Dominique Anxo1,, Colette Fagan2, Inmaculada Cebrian3 and Gloria Moreno3

1 School of Management and Economics, Department of Economics and Statistics, Vaxjo, Sweden
2 European Work and Employment Research Centre (EWERC), University of Manchester, UK
3 Department of Fundamentals of Economic Analysis, University of Alcala, Spain

Correspondence: dominique.anxo{at}vxu.se

This article examines the patterns of labour market integration over the life course of men and women in seven European countries. We select a range of household categories coinciding with different phases in the life course and use the European Community Household Panel survey to identify four broad national models, which are associated with different state regimes with regards to ‘time policy’. These are the Nordic ‘universal breadwinner model (Sweden) of high participation involving long part-time or full-time hours and high employment continuity for both sexes over the life course; the ‘modified breadwinner model (France) where family formation and motherhood are still associated with withdrawal from the labour market for some groups of women and where mothers who are employed work predominantly full-time; the Mediterraneanexit or full-time model (Italy and Spain) where fewer women are employed, but when employed generally work full-time; finally different models of ‘Maternal part-time work’ (Dutch, German and UK) where motherhood is associated with a reduction in the employment rate that is less than that found in the Mediterranean countries and in France, but where part-time hours are the norm for mothers, even when children are older. We conclude that the Nordic model features the least pronounced gender inequality in time allocation to employment over the life course combined with a greater level of ‘active ageing’ of older workers. This profile is supported by a coherent and integrated set of policies for time and income management over the life course in contrast to the more piecemeal measures that exist in other national models. Hence, the Nordic model offers important insights for EU employment policy.

Key Words: labor supply • household behavior • gender inequality • Europe


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