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Belgium: Is strong social concertation a driver of upward social convergence?

In: Towards Convergence in Europe

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  • Ive Marx

Abstract

Belgium’s social concertation model is extraordinarily resilient. Social dialogue is institutionally firmly embedded and the social partners continue to wield significant influence in shaping social and economic policy. Belgium is also among the few rich countries not to have seen growing income inequalities. Belgium maintains just about the most equal wage distribution in the capitalist world – including one of the smallest gender pay gaps – and there is little evidence of precarisation of work. The key argument of this chapter is that robust social dialogue has helped to contain inequality. The Belgian experience thus provides a powerful antidote to views that growing inequalities are inevitable. However, Belgium’s labour market is not as inclusive as we would wish and this, too, has to be seen, at least in part, in the context of the institutional rigidities and insider biases inherent in an extensive social concertation model such as Belgium’s.

Suggested Citation

  • Ive Marx, 2019. "Belgium: Is strong social concertation a driver of upward social convergence?," Chapters, in: Daniel Vaughan-Whitehead (ed.), Towards Convergence in Europe, chapter 3, pages 78-100, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:18804_3
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