Partisan power, economic coordination and variations in vocational training systems in Europe

Author (Person) ,
Series Title
Series Details Vol.20, No.1, March 2014, p55–71
Publication Date March 2014
ISSN 0959-6801
Content Type

Abstract:

This article explores the variation of vocational education and training systems in European countries. From a survey of experts in 15 European countries, we develop a typology along two dimensions: employer involvement and public commitment. In a second step, we explain the variety of skill formation systems, highlighting the importance of partisan power and economic coordination. The causal argument is applied in three illustrative case studies of Germany, Sweden and the UK. In particular, we argue that a high degree of economic coordination increases the relevance of training relative to academic education. However, differences within the cluster of coordinated market economies are related to different legacies of partisan power in the post-war decades.

Source Link Link to Main Source http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959680113512731
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Countries / Regions , , ,