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Subsidized employment and the symbolic segmentation of internal markets: An interview study with Swedish workers on wage subsidies on navigating dual labor markets.

Fäldtman, Alexander LU (2023) WPMM41 20231
School of Social Work
Abstract
The aim of the study was to complement dual labor market research by qualitatively exploring how labor market segmentations may be understood beyond sociodemographics or inequalities of job quality. By interviewing 12 Swedish workers with wage subsidies I have found that access to high job quality may facilitate trajectories towards primary market sectors, but they are only relevant so far as the workers feel that they deserve access to good jobs. Among the main findings were segmentations within the workplace between those employed through wage subsidies and those who were not. This is because as subsidy programs eventually reduce compensation when workers become more productive, internal market logic is reversed as employers are... (More)
The aim of the study was to complement dual labor market research by qualitatively exploring how labor market segmentations may be understood beyond sociodemographics or inequalities of job quality. By interviewing 12 Swedish workers with wage subsidies I have found that access to high job quality may facilitate trajectories towards primary market sectors, but they are only relevant so far as the workers feel that they deserve access to good jobs. Among the main findings were segmentations within the workplace between those employed through wage subsidies and those who were not. This is because as subsidy programs eventually reduce compensation when workers become more productive, internal market logic is reversed as employers are incentivized to obfuscate improvements during yearly revisions with the Swedish Public Employment Agency. These workers may then become relegated to a secondary internal market with fewer options for tenures and job advancements compared to workers who entered through non-interventionist market mechanisms. Beyond material inequalities between colleagues, a symbolic segmentation between “adequate” and “disadvantaged” workers were prevalent in descriptions of work experiences, suggesting an inequality of social selves. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Fäldtman, Alexander LU
supervisor
organization
course
WPMM41 20231
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
wage subsidy, dual labor market, disability, criminal record, interactionism
language
English
id
9134830
date added to LUP
2023-08-22 10:00:07
date last changed
2023-08-22 10:00:07
@misc{9134830,
  abstract     = {{The aim of the study was to complement dual labor market research by qualitatively exploring how labor market segmentations may be understood beyond sociodemographics or inequalities of job quality. By interviewing 12 Swedish workers with wage subsidies I have found that access to high job quality may facilitate trajectories towards primary market sectors, but they are only relevant so far as the workers feel that they deserve access to good jobs. Among the main findings were segmentations within the workplace between those employed through wage subsidies and those who were not. This is because as subsidy programs eventually reduce compensation when workers become more productive, internal market logic is reversed as employers are incentivized to obfuscate improvements during yearly revisions with the Swedish Public Employment Agency. These workers may then become relegated to a secondary internal market with fewer options for tenures and job advancements compared to workers who entered through non-interventionist market mechanisms. Beyond material inequalities between colleagues, a symbolic segmentation between “adequate” and “disadvantaged” workers were prevalent in descriptions of work experiences, suggesting an inequality of social selves.}},
  author       = {{Fäldtman, Alexander}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Subsidized employment and the symbolic segmentation of internal markets: An interview study with Swedish workers on wage subsidies on navigating dual labor markets.}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}