That’s broadly not how the labour market works in Europe - but it does in Scandinavia, where the unions “won” (and long may they reign). Almost EVERYONE is in a union, most unions have negotiated a seat on the board of the business and as a result, the union-employer relationship is SO different to elsewhere. This includes the need for state interventions like minimum wage or work time maximums (except the EU directives on work time maximums, which the Nordic countries felt very uncomfortable adopting as it felt like an unnecessary intervention).
Consequently, the unions have “grown up” and don’t reflexively reject any labour market adjustments required. They act as a mature partner, even through redundancies, working to minimise and help people move on.
Partnered with the Scandinavian “flexicurity” model, where it’s very easy to hire and very easy to fire people, but the state has strong support for unemployed people in between jobs (education, financial support), the labour market is probably the most efficient in the world.
Social democracy, yo. It works.
cheese_greater@lemmy.world 11 months ago
I agree except for my point in life and with all factors consider, I need it to be hard to fire lol
meekah@lemmy.world 11 months ago
If your flat, food, and education gets paid for by the government while you are in between jobs, why be afraid of being fired?
cheese_greater@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Because i live in NA and its expressly NOT like that and also we dont have any free shit to the extent thats a viable option to be able to just suddenly decide to go do.
meekah@lemmy.world 11 months ago
ah sorry, I thought we are talking about a hypothetical where you are living in a system similar to the nordic ones.