En Es Fr

FLEXIBLE WORKER

   Imprimer  
Synonymes ou variantes : FLEX WORKER
FLEXI WORKER
FLEXI-WORKER
FLEX-WORKER
Équivalents : TRABAJADOR FLEXIBLE
TRAVAILLEUR FLEXIBLE
Domaine : Travailleur

Définition

A worker whose work schedule, salary, fringe benefits and working conditions are variable or irregular, as a consequence of either the employer's requirements or the worker's desire.

Contexte

"Like unemployment, flexible forms of work pose a challenge to social security arrangements. Flexible forms of work lack continuity. Defining the periods during which flex-workers are entitled to various benefits (e.g. unemployment benefits), is becoming more difficult as the forms of work continue to multiply and definitions of various forms of work become blurred."
(International Labour Organization (ILO), Labour Market Trends and Globalization's Impact on Them, visited 2009-06-22)

"Trade liberalization forces companies to become more flexible and competitive. Many have become increasingly dependent on low-cost flexible workers, often employed on an irregular basis."
(Youth and the United Nations, World Youth Report 2005 , visited 2009-06-22)

Description

"Flexibility is a term frequently used in the context of EU employment and industrial relations but its meaning is contested. This is because it includes three dimensions.
  1. It can refer to employers' desire for variable (flexible) labour inputs, in terms of numbers employed or hours worked, to match changes in demand for products or services. It can also refer to changing the tasks and skills of employees to increase productivity. The first type is sometimes described as ‘external', ‘quantitative' or ‘numerical' flexibility; the second as ‘internal', 'qualitative'; or ‘functional' flexibility.
  2. It can also refer to employees' desire for variable (flexible) contractual arrangements and working conditions to match changing private and domestic needs. Flexibility may concern different forms of contractual arrangement (including ‘atypical work'), particularly as regards working time, to suit better work-life balance.
  3. Flexibility is also often presented in the EU context as a policy response to ‘labour market rigidities', which some economists regard as contributing to unemployment. Strategies on employment have been influenced by studies, such as that of the OECD Jobs Study in 1994, which favourably compare the US labour market with the ‘rigidities' of those of the EU Member States. However, policies of deregulation aimed at increasing flexibility (e.g. easier hiring and firing of labour) may be seen as threatening employment security and quality of work. For example, when the Commission's Social Policy Agenda 2000-2005 (COM (2000) 379 final, Brussels, 28 June 2000) refers to ‘flexibility', it consistently refers to a ‘balance between flexibility and security' (or flexicurity) to emphasise the broader concept of 'quality.'"
(European Industrial Relations Dictionary (Eurofound), Flexibility, visited 2009-06-22)

Labour flexibility is linked to employment precariousness. Flexicurity, a portemanteau word blending "flexibility" and "security," is an approach to ensure a balance between labour market flexibility and employment security.
Dictionnaire analytique de la mondialisation et du travail
© Jeanne Dancette