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Cover image for Jobs, training and worker well-being
Title:
Jobs, training and worker well-being
Series:
Research in labor economics ; v. 30.
Edition:
1st ed.
Publication Information:
Bingley, UK : IZA : Emerald, 2010
Physical Description:
xvi, 337 p. ; cm.
ISBN:
9781849507660

9781849507677

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Material Type
Item Category 1
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30000010252339 HF5549.5.J63 J63 2010 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

This volume contains twelve cutting edge papers contributing new research to important issues concerning worker welfare. The research deals with earnings inequality, discrimination, the effects of migration, and economic policy. Answers to a number of policy related questions are given including: Why are jobs designed the way they are? Does seniority-based pay provide a sufficient motivation for workers? Do sex-segregated firms grow more quickly than firms more equally divided by gender? What policies are effective in combating discrimination? Why is relative rural-urban income inequality so much greater in China than the US? How does migrating from one region to another affect one's child's schooling decisions? Do higher migration levels affect native worker wages?


Table of Contents

Audrey Dumas and Said Hanchane and Jacques SilberFilipe Almeida-Santos and Yekaterina Chzhen and Karen MumfordNiny Khor and John PencavelMichael Gibbs and Alec Levenson and Cindy ZoghiAlberto Bayo-Moriones and Jose E. Galdon-Sanchez and Maia GüellChristian Belzil and Michael BognannoSimon Luechinger and Alois Stutzer and Rainer WinkelmannHelena Persson and Gabriella Sjögren LindquistYuval Shilony and Yossef TobolLouis N. Christofides and Paris Nearchou
List of Contributorsp. vii
Prefacep. xi
On The Link Between Investment In On-The-Job Training And Earnings Dispersion: The Case Of Francep. 1
Employee Training and Wage Dispersion: White- And Blue-Collar Workers In Britainp. 35
Income Inequality, Income Mobility, and Social Welfare For Urban And Rural Households Of China And The United Statesp. 61
Why are Jobs Designed The Way They Are?p. 107
Is Seniority-Based Pay Used As A Motivational Device? Evidence From Plant-Level Datap. 155
The Promotion Dynamics of American Executivesp. 189
Self-Selection Models for Public and Private Sector Job Satisfactionp. 233
The Survival and Growth of Establishments: Does Gender Segregation Matter?p. 253
Futile and Effective Ways to Combat Wage Discriminationp. 283
Patterns of Nominal and Real Wage Rigidityp. 301
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