The author uses Spain as the extreme example.
"But the reforms had unintended consequences too. Temporary contracts surged, soon accounting for close to a third of Spanish employment. Workers churned from job to job: just 6% of temporary contracts were converted to permanent employment during the mid-2000s."
There are negatives for both employer and employees in this type of system.
The author indicates that France and Germany have versions of a dual market that encourage the hiring of temporary workers as well. This chart is provided.
France and Germany are clearly doing better than Spain in terms of unemployment. Nevertheless, the author leads the reader inexorably to the conclusion that the easier it is to fire workers, the better it is for the economy.
"Germany may have pursued wage restraint, but that is no easy route to prosperity. Indeed, dual labour markets are more likely to have the opposite effect. Permanent workers fearlessly seek higher wages, confident that job losses will fall first on temporary workers. Soaring Spanish unemployment has produced little wage moderation. During 2009 the pay of permanent workers rose by 4% in real terms."
And finally we arrive at this conclusion:
The emphasis is mine. The author seems to think that economics and economies obey fundamental physical laws and concepts that were effective "across decades" have relevance to the current situation. What worked in the US decades ago has little relevance to the current situation. One might look at the figures in the chart the author provided and conclude that youth unemployment is a function of the strength of the economy—period.
In an earlier article The Economist provided this chart comparing youth unemployment rates to unemployment rates for older workers.
If the US approach, which actually encourages companies to terminate workers when the economy slows, is better, one would expect to see some difference between the US and the rest of the world in terms of either total unemployment, or with respect to the rates of youth unemployment. In this context, the US and Spain look very similar. It would be hard to claim that youths have an advantage in the US economy. In terms of total unemployment rate, it would appear that the US, with its approach, is now just another country hoping that growth will overcome its structural problems.
This article served the purpose of reminding us that the US also has a "dual" labor market—one that is much more advantageous for employers than anything referred to here. In the US, companies have actually convinced young people that it is to their benefit to work for free for a year or two before even being considered for a low-paying, entry-level position with zero job security. This situation was discussed in The Fastest Growing Job Category: Unpaid Interning. If one wishes to create systems that are abusive to the young, Europe has a way to go to catch up with the US.
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