The growing role of institutions and their influence on the labour market outcomes, i.e., wage rates and labour allocation, has been among the most significant characteristic features of labour markets in recent decades. The labour market economics built its paradigm on the principles of marginalism, which brought suitable instruments for the analysis of market agents’ individual decisions capable of achieving effective solutions. Smith’s “invisible hand” has gradually been limited by institutional interventions – by governments, corporations and trade unions with government legislation, corporate personnel policies and collective bargaining. The expanding regulatory interventions in the labour market and the effort to explain the reality...
Labor economics is the science which analyzes labor market, labor resources and employment, long-ter...
© 2014 The Association for Social Economics. This post-disciplinary article goes beyond orthodox lab...
There is fairly wide agreement among economists on what con-stitutes optimal—or at least good—produc...
AbstractThe contribution focuses on the development of labour market economic theory. It shows the i...
The growing role of institutions and their influence on the labour market outcomes, i.e. wage rates ...
The goal of this paper is to reconsider institutional labor economics and make a renewed case for it...
The importance of the labor market is indisputable. The coun-tries ’ economic outcomes rely to a sig...
In this article one undertook the test of evidencing basic sources of changes on the labour market....
The author illustrates the utility of institutional labor economics and makes a case for a reconside...
Abstract: Debate among labor economists on the pros and cons of a minimum wage law has come to focus...
Building upon trans-disciplinary insights from the ‘socio-economics of labour markets’ tradition and...
This paper originated as a presentation to a conference organized by Professor Isabel Calderon Gutie...
Labour market theory underlies much of economic analysis with implications for theory and policy. I ...
The significant role of institutional and non-market factors in the functioning of an economic syste...
This essay on labor economics examines neoclassical theory's rise to ascendancy following the second...
Labor economics is the science which analyzes labor market, labor resources and employment, long-ter...
© 2014 The Association for Social Economics. This post-disciplinary article goes beyond orthodox lab...
There is fairly wide agreement among economists on what con-stitutes optimal—or at least good—produc...
AbstractThe contribution focuses on the development of labour market economic theory. It shows the i...
The growing role of institutions and their influence on the labour market outcomes, i.e. wage rates ...
The goal of this paper is to reconsider institutional labor economics and make a renewed case for it...
The importance of the labor market is indisputable. The coun-tries ’ economic outcomes rely to a sig...
In this article one undertook the test of evidencing basic sources of changes on the labour market....
The author illustrates the utility of institutional labor economics and makes a case for a reconside...
Abstract: Debate among labor economists on the pros and cons of a minimum wage law has come to focus...
Building upon trans-disciplinary insights from the ‘socio-economics of labour markets’ tradition and...
This paper originated as a presentation to a conference organized by Professor Isabel Calderon Gutie...
Labour market theory underlies much of economic analysis with implications for theory and policy. I ...
The significant role of institutional and non-market factors in the functioning of an economic syste...
This essay on labor economics examines neoclassical theory's rise to ascendancy following the second...
Labor economics is the science which analyzes labor market, labor resources and employment, long-ter...
© 2014 The Association for Social Economics. This post-disciplinary article goes beyond orthodox lab...
There is fairly wide agreement among economists on what con-stitutes optimal—or at least good—produc...