6533b86ffe1ef96bd12cd3f9

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Locked in Inferiority? : The Positions of Estonian Construction Workers in the Finnish Migrant Labour Regime

Markku SippolaKairit Kall

subject

Labour economicsrakennustyöntekijätulkomainen työvoima0502 economics and businessTrade unionSuomi050602 political science & public administrationIndustrial relationsFinlandGovernmentmigrant labourbusiness.industryMigrant workers05 social sciences050209 industrial relationsSmall businessEstonianlanguage.human_language0506 political sciencetyönjakolanguagePosition (finance)BusinesssiirtotyöläisetrakennusalaDivision of labour

description

Abstract The aim of this article is to analyse how different policies and actors have structured the current migrant labour regime in the Finnish construction sector and to discuss the consequences for migrants. Our study shows that a strong industrial relations system such as in Finland is able to curb the posting of workers regime (the most disadvantageous for migrant workers). The position of labour migrants has become more diverse in the segmented labour market, although it remains inferior compared to that of the natives. Consideration of the policy development revolving around the changing migrant labour regimes constitutes the first part of the analysis and is based on government and trade union officials’ accounts. The more substantial part of the study draws upon biographical interviews with Estonian construction workers and analyses the division of migrant labour according to their employment in four ‘patterns of firm ownership’ that range from the most unfavourable to most favourable position: workers posted by Estonian firms; workers employed by firms registered in Finland but operated by Estonians; self-employed/small business owners and workers employed by Finnish firms. The structuring of the regime according to the pattern of firm ownership can be interpreted as a manifestation of employers’ intentional strategies to adapt to or avoid national regulations and to some extent as also reflecting workers’ individual and collective agency.

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201611224702