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Title: Dual Embeddedness: Informal Job Matching and Labor Market Institutions in the United States and Germany
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. McDonald, Steve
Benton, Richard A.
Warner, David F.
Dual Embeddedness: Informal Job Matching and Labor Market Institutions in the United States and Germany
Social Forces 91,1 (September 2012): 75-97.
Also: http://sf.oxfordjournals.org/content/91/1/75.abstract
Cohort(s): NLSY79
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Keyword(s): Employment; Firms; German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP); Job Characteristics; Job Search

Permission to reprint the abstract has not been received from the publisher.

Drawing on the embeddedness, varieties of capitalism and macrosociological life course perspectives, we examine how institutional arrangements affect network-based job finding behaviors in the United States and Germany. Analysis of cross-national survey data reveals that informal job matching is highly clustered among specific types of individuals and firms in the United States, whereas it is more ubiquitous in Germany. These differences are linked to (1. loosely regulated and hierarchical employment relations in the United States that facilitate network dominance in specific economic sectors and (2. coordinated market relations, tight employment regulations and extensive social insurance system in Germany that generate opportunities for informal matching but limit the influence of network behavior on employment characteristics. These findings illustrate how social institutions shape access to economic resources through network relations.
Bibliography Citation
McDonald, Steve, Richard A. Benton and David F. Warner. "Dual Embeddedness: Informal Job Matching and Labor Market Institutions in the United States and Germany." Social Forces 91,1 (September 2012): 75-97.