In twenty-three original essays this book surveys the course of labor economics over the more than two centuries since the publication of Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations. It fully examines the contending theories, changing environmental contexts, evolving issues, and varied policies affecting labor's participation in the economy. Beginning with George P. Shultz, who provides the foreword, the contributors are among the most distinguished scholars in labor economics and industrial relations. These essays represent some of their finest work and apply the ideas for which they are best known. Highlights include John T. Dunlop on internal labor markets, John Kenneth Galbraith on power relationships in the economy, Robert M. Solow on explanation of unemployment, Jacob Mincer on human capital, Lloyd G. Reynolds on labor in developing countries, Richard A. Lester on wage differentials, Edward F. Denison on productivity, Richard Freeman on union/non-union differentials, F. Ray Marshall on human resource development, and Thomas A. Kochan on policy making. While the intellectual framework of the book looks partly to the past - explaining the labor factor in classical and neoclassical systems - its emphasis is on contemporary problems that will figure prominently in future developments, such as the operation of internal labor markets, dispute resolution, concession bargaining, equal employment opportunity, and individual labor contracting. This book is required reading for students and scholars of labor economics.
Analyzes the field of labour economics and labour relations, covering labour market economics, wage determination, union organization, collective bargaining and the economic effects of unionization. Emphasis is placed on policy...
Readings in Labor Economics and Labor Relations
Monographic compilation of essays on trends in labour economics and labour relations in the USA - discusses declining collective bargaining trade union power, the Marxism theoretical approach to trade union...
Textbook on labour economics and labour relations in the USA - covers trade union structure, union leadership and membership, collective bargaining, management attitudes, grievance procedure, labour market, labour force, labour...
Readings in Labor Economics and Labor Relations
However mechanized some branches of industry may become , and however the methods of mass production may result in monotonous semiautomatic repetition , the worker must never be treated as a cog in a machine if industrial relations are ...
Assessing scholarly work done in the 1980s, the editors discuss four major areas of research: unions, collective bargaining, and dispute resolution; human resource management; labor market research; and the regulation of industrial ...
... of the issues with direct relevance for those studying the links between corporate governance and labor management. ... Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece and Turkey – are difficult to accommodate within either the LME or CME category ...
Advances in Industrial and Labor Relations: A Research Annual
... ( 1992 ) Canada 167 -1.70 -0.14 Bartel ( 1994 ) US 155 1.95 0.16 Batt ( 1999 ) US 202 -0.57 -0.04 US 1346 0.85 0.04 Black & Lynch ( 1996 ) US 638 -0.21 -0.01 Boal ( 1990 ) US 249 0.09 Black & Lynch ( 2001 ) 0.01 Bronars et al .