Abstract
AbstractAustralia’s welfare-to-work system has been subject to ongoing political contestation and policy reform since the 1990s. In this paper we take a big picture look at the Australian system over time, re-visiting our earlier analysis of the impact of marketisation on flexibility at the frontline over the first ten years of the Australian market in employment services. That analysis demonstrated that marketisation had failed to deliver the service flexibility intended through contracting-out, and had instead produced market herding around a common set of standardised frontline practices. In the interim, there have been two further major redesigns of the Australian system at considerable expense to taxpayers. Re-introducing greater flexibility and service tailoring into the market has been a key aim of these reforms. Calling on evidence from an original, longitudinal survey of frontline employment service staff run in 2008, 2012 and 2016, this paper considers how the Australian market has evolved over its second decade. We find remarkable consistency over time and, indeed, evidence of deepening organisational convergence. We conclude that, once in motion, isomorphic pressures towards standardisation quickly get locked into quasi-market regimes; at least when these pressures occur in low-trust contracting environments.
Highlights
Since the s, there has been a radical change in the institutions delivering public employment services in many OECD countries
We examine this second decade of Australian quasi-market reform and the changes that have unfolded since Job Network (JN)
In contrast to the intent behind the Job Services Australia (JSA) and Jobactive reforms, these data suggest a moderate reduction in levels of frontline autonomy since JN
Summary
Since the s, there has been a radical change in the institutions delivering public employment services in many OECD countries. Aspects of how the transactional arrangements between purchasers and providers are organised in welfare markets can further strengthen and intersect with these isomorphic pressures to reinforce tendencies towards standardisation in employment services fields.
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