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2004 | 51 | 1 | 46-65

Article title

Reasons for the spread of atypical work in the knowledge economy

Authors

Title variants

Languages of publication

HU

Abstracts

EN
The fixed employment for an indefinite term previously typical of industrial society (bolstered by various privileges and safeguards) has been declining in the last decade or two. There has been an unstoppable spread by various forms of atypical employment, ranging from agency labour to remote working at back-up offices in the Third World. The article places atypical work within the conceptual frames of the new institutional school, emphasizing the diminishing human-capital specificity in employment relations. The 'loosening' of work - the decomposition in time and space of concentrated factory work - is a change comparable in importance to the appearance of the factory system. 'Loosened' work is a logical consequence of the development patterns in the knowledge economy. According to the logic of information technology, modules making up production processes (like the cells of economic organizations) gain independence; each leads a life of its own, with infinite combinatory possibilities opening up. The same trend appears in the work field, where firm, tied, static, 'safe' forms become changeable, 'fluid', dynamic and uncertain. This gives a boost to the knowledge economy, as nomadic employees take their expertise with them from one project, economic unit, country or region to the next. The other side of the coin, however, is that employees (other than key personnel with the fundamental competencies) become interchangeable, disposable, recallable and transferable - in a word, insecure.

Year

Volume

51

Issue

1

Pages

46-65

Physical description

Document type

ARTICLE

Contributors

author
author
  • K. Szabo, no address given, contact the journal editor

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

CEJSH db identifier
06HUAAAA00661666

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.a768566a-9530-3ea9-8a66-2a12be6ce33d
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