Pernicka Susanne, Glassner Vera, Dittmar Nele
Institut für Soziologie, Abteilung Wirtschafts- und Organisationssoziologie, Johannes Kepler Universität Linz, Altenberger Straße 69, 4040 Linz, Austria.
OZS Osterr Z Soziol. 2018;43(Suppl 1):93-116. doi: 10.1007/s11614-018-0298-6. Epub 2018 May 16.
This article addresses the restructuring of wage-setting institutions in social services in Austria and Germany and seeks to better understand the forces shaping their changes and continuities. Social services include a wide range of services such as labour market policies or elderly care provided by state, private for- and non-profit organisations. Despite similar pressures resulting from European and national politics of economic liberalisation and austerity and the emergence of transnational corporations and labour migration wage-setting in social services turned out to follow different institutional paths. This article expands conventional theorising by using a social field perspective to uncover the role of (institutionalised) power relations and conflict dynamics in shaping the wage-setting institutions. While existing institutions and particular power relations between regional and national actors helped create a common wage-setting field in Austrian social services, the interactions between national and regional, and, to a lesser extent, transnational field participants have led to fragmented and still contested institutions of wage setting in German social services.