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Housing is not guaranteed unless you enter the welfare system and the conditions they impose for continuing to provide you benefits are very strict and it is very easy especially for people with mental health problems or people who don’t speak the language very well to miss appointments or to be overwhelmed with the bureaucratic paperwork that needs to be filled out correctly in order to keep your social housing. Also they demand that you apply for the jobs they tell you to apply for since their primary objective is to get people into the job market.
Unions are widespread in certain professions but they are essentially politically neutered. By law they are forbidden from engaging in any activities that could be construed as political and they are highly regulated in terms of even when or how they can strike or collectively bargain. Everything around worker participation follows strict legal regulation, the point of which is to create class collaborationism and make it impossible for workers to act in an organized way that is hostile to the employer.
No, there is no UBI. If you have worked for a certain period of time you get unemployment benefits for a time if you lose your job. Otherwise when those run out you only have social welfare which is very meager and as i said before comes with very strict conditions and a humiliating loss of control over your own life essentially. The system is also semi-privatized with the state often outsourcing the managing and coaching of unemployed people to private agencies.
There are a lot of differences to the US, but also a lot of similarities. In some ways it is still much better, it can’t be denied that there are still many more regulations that protect workers and greatly increase the quality of life, things like guaranteed paid vacation time, maternity and sick leave, certain protections against being fired without reason, etc. But the point is the long term trend which has been everywhere from the UK to Germany to Scandinavia toward a slow dismantling of the post war social democratic consensus and adoption of US-like neoliberal practices but “with European characteristics”.
Housing is not guaranteed unless you enter the welfare system and the conditions they impose for continuing to provide you benefits are very strict and it is very easy especially for people with mental health problems or people who don’t speak the language very well to miss appointments or to be overwhelmed with the bureaucratic paperwork that needs to be filled out correctly in order to keep your social housing. Also they demand that you apply for the jobs they tell you to apply for since their primary objective is to get people into the job market.
Unions are widespread in certain professions but they are essentially politically neutered. By law they are forbidden from engaging in any activities that could be construed as political and they are highly regulated in terms of even when or how they can strike or collectively bargain. Everything around worker participation follows strict legal regulation, the point of which is to create class collaborationism and make it impossible for workers to act in an organized way that is hostile to the employer.
No, there is no UBI. If you have worked for a certain period of time you get unemployment benefits for a time if you lose your job. Otherwise when those run out you only have social welfare which is very meager and as i said before comes with very strict conditions and a humiliating loss of control over your own life essentially. The system is also semi-privatized with the state often outsourcing the managing and coaching of unemployed people to private agencies.
Thank you for the info. So it’s the US but with a welfare system basically…
There are a lot of differences to the US, but also a lot of similarities. In some ways it is still much better, it can’t be denied that there are still many more regulations that protect workers and greatly increase the quality of life, things like guaranteed paid vacation time, maternity and sick leave, certain protections against being fired without reason, etc. But the point is the long term trend which has been everywhere from the UK to Germany to Scandinavia toward a slow dismantling of the post war social democratic consensus and adoption of US-like neoliberal practices but “with European characteristics”.
Thank you for the information