- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > Business / Economics
基本説明
New in paperback. Hardcover was published in 1995. This book examines theories of firm-level human capital investment with respect to topics in labor demand, macroeconomics (especially connected to unemployment), and firm-union bargaining. It covers the role of specific investment in the Japanese firm versus the traditional (United States) neoclassical firm.
Full Description
This book examines human capital investment, employment and bargaining at the level of the firm. It attempts a summary of results that incorporate both human capital investment and employment decisions within firm union bargaining models, emphasising investment in teams, or groups, of workers. The authors also examine human capital in relation to labour demand as well as the delineation between neoclassical and coalitional firms. Further they investigate connections between, on the one hand, turnover costs and firm-specific human capital and, on the other, unemployment. Labour market policy topics recur throughout the book and include the choice between pure wage and profit sharing remuneration systems, the issue of whether training should be subsidized by governments, and work-sharing versus layoff decisions. This book is aimed mainly at the academic economics profession, but is easily accessible to final-year undergraduate and postgraduate students.
Contents
1. Overview; 2. Labour demand and efficient contract models; 3. Turnover costs, firm-specific training and employment; 4. Employment and bargaining; 5. Choice of compensation, unemployment insurance and policy issues; 6. Team-related human capital and bargaining; 7. Coalitional versus neoclassical firms; 8. Future developments.



