It is widely recognized that human capital is essential to sustaining a competitive economy at high and rising living standards. Yet acceptance of persistent high unemployment, stagnant wages, and other indicators of declining job quality suggests that policymakers and employers undervalue human capital. This paper traces the root cause of this apparent paradox to the primacy afforded shareholder value over human resource considerations in American firms and the longstanding gridlock over employment policy. I suggest that a new jobs compact will be needed to close the deficit in jobs lost in the recent recession and to achieve sustained real wage growth
Abstract: We specify conditions under which a strictly positive probability of employment in a forei...
[Excerpt] It is not surprising that most theories of human capital treat the firm as the key unit of...
Adam Smith (1776) devoted the first three chapters to the division of labor in his Inquiry into the ...
It is widely recognized that human capital is essential to sustaining a competitive economy at high ...
It is widely recognized that human capital is essential to sustaining a competitive economy at high ...
It is widely recognized that human capital is essential to sustaining a competitive economy at high ...
It is widely recognized that human capital is essential to sustaining a competitive economy at high ...
It is widely recognized that human capital is essential to sustaining a competitive economy at high ...
This thesis investigates the role of human capital in understanding recent developments in the U.S. ...
This chapter argues that human capital theory cannot provide the policy guidance required to address...
Skill erosion during unemployment was of particular concern as unemployment duration increased in th...
This thesis examines how economic forces shape the nature of employment and the development of human...
We develop a new approach to measuring human capital that permits the distinction of both observable...
A region\u27s workforce has been described as its greatest asset. Guided by human capital theory and...
Frequent job-changing by secondary workers in a rural labor force is found to be consistent with the...
Abstract: We specify conditions under which a strictly positive probability of employment in a forei...
[Excerpt] It is not surprising that most theories of human capital treat the firm as the key unit of...
Adam Smith (1776) devoted the first three chapters to the division of labor in his Inquiry into the ...
It is widely recognized that human capital is essential to sustaining a competitive economy at high ...
It is widely recognized that human capital is essential to sustaining a competitive economy at high ...
It is widely recognized that human capital is essential to sustaining a competitive economy at high ...
It is widely recognized that human capital is essential to sustaining a competitive economy at high ...
It is widely recognized that human capital is essential to sustaining a competitive economy at high ...
This thesis investigates the role of human capital in understanding recent developments in the U.S. ...
This chapter argues that human capital theory cannot provide the policy guidance required to address...
Skill erosion during unemployment was of particular concern as unemployment duration increased in th...
This thesis examines how economic forces shape the nature of employment and the development of human...
We develop a new approach to measuring human capital that permits the distinction of both observable...
A region\u27s workforce has been described as its greatest asset. Guided by human capital theory and...
Frequent job-changing by secondary workers in a rural labor force is found to be consistent with the...
Abstract: We specify conditions under which a strictly positive probability of employment in a forei...
[Excerpt] It is not surprising that most theories of human capital treat the firm as the key unit of...
Adam Smith (1776) devoted the first three chapters to the division of labor in his Inquiry into the ...