Department of Political Science / School of Economics and Political Science, University of St.Gallen

New paper in the Journal of European Public Policy

A great to start the year (or rather, to end the old one). The Journal of European Public Policy has accepted our new paper “What Skills for the Future? The Knowledge Economy as a Coalition Magnet” (together with Martin B. Carstensen and Cecilia Ivardi) for publication. Below is the abstract:

Enhancing economic competitiveness in the knowledge economy requires policies that align workforce skills with emerging demands. This paper examines the discursive battle over the skills of the future and argues that the idea of the knowledge economy works as a ‘coalition magnet.’ Policymakers use the ‘knowledge economy’ flexibly together with ideas about skill needs and social inclusion to assemble political coalitions that support distinct interpretations of the knowledge economy that vary over time and cross-nationally. We conduct a discourse network analysis, examining data from newspapers over the period 2005-2022. We find that in Denmark and Germany, high and general skill needs are a magnet for social inclusion ideas, fostering a discourse focused on a ‘social’ view of the knowledge economy. In contrast, in France and the UK, the high and general skill needs are a magnet for ideas related to otherskill concerns, particularly concerning mid-skilled workers. These combinations are driven by different actor constellations: private actors in Denmark and the UK, and the state in France and Germany, usethe knowledge economy as a coalition magnet.