Vol. 20 · No. 3 · Fall 2002
Policy Activism In A Globalized Economy
France's 35-hour Workweek

Gunnar Trumbull

Get Adobe Acrobat. Download full article (77 KB) [subscribers only]

Abstract

Globalization is commonly thought to impede policy activism. Yet France's 35-hour workweek initiative demonstrates that globalization can, in certain circumstances, create incentives for greater policy activism. This is because economic actors experience globalization differently. The French government, facing fiscal and monetary constraints, was seeking alternative means for promoting employment. French employers, facing new foreign competition, increasingly valued workforce flexibility. And French labor unions, facing declining membership, were anxious to establish a bridgehead in new sectors of the economy. These diverse pressures of globalization, felt differently by different economic actors, created the context in which an activist labor policy could be negotiated.