Decentralisation spreads over Europe. It started approximately a decennium ago with the election of Mrs Margaret Thatcher as Prime Minister of Britain. She initiated a large number of privatisations and decentralisations of governmental responsibilities given the enormous federal deficit and the poor condition of the British economy. At the same time, the end of the 70s, the beginning of the 80s, the Dutch faced similar problems: an excessively large governmental deficit, an increasing number of civil servants, high unemployment rates, an overstretched social security system and a somewhat unstable economy. By the mid 80s a worldwide economic boom ensued, during which the Dutch economy was growing at average rates of 2–3 percent a year, reducing the urge in the Netherlands to make structural choices. The system itself was not changed.
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1 October 1991
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Management Research News
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October 01 1991
Public Sector Industrial Relations in the Netherlands: A Future Without Civil Servants Available to Purchase
W.S.P. Fortuyn
W.S.P. Fortuyn
The Erasmus University, Rotterdam
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6135
Print ISSN: 0140-9174
© MCB UP Limited
1991
Management Research News (1991) 14 (10): 19.
Citation
Fortuyn W (1991), "Public Sector Industrial Relations in the Netherlands: A Future Without Civil Servants". Management Research News, Vol. 14 No. 10 pp. 19, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb028174
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