TY - GEN digital ID - 131706636 TI - Industrial and Labor Economics : Issues in Developing and Transition Countries AU - Kar, Saibal AU - Datta, Debabrata PY - 2015 SN - 9788132220176 9788132220183 9788132220169 9788132235477 PB - New Delhi Springer India DB - UniCat KW - Economic sociology KW - Demography KW - Migration. Refugees KW - Labour economics KW - Business policy KW - Personnel management KW - demografie KW - economie KW - industrie KW - coaching KW - arbeid KW - HRM (human resource management) KW - migratie (mensen) KW - sociale economie UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:131706636 AB - This book is an attempt to capture and analyze several idiosyncratic features of industry and labor in the developing world. Available books and graduate-level texts in labor economics largely discuss industrial and labor market situations prevalent in developed countries, where well-defined institutional arrangements and regulations create a very different scope of analysis. The patterns of choice in training and contracts in the labor market more apparent in developing and transition countries are discussed, as are the information-theoretic results. The book also critically examines labor migration, a context in which the developing and transition countries represent large sources in the present global order. A broad base of empirical observations from industries is used to develop analytical conjectures on risk-sharing arrangements between workers and employers, while strong intuitive explanations are combined with relevant mathematical and graphical derivations, ensuring the book’s readability among graduate students pursuing courses in labor economics and industrial economics for developing and transition countries. The book may also serve as a valuable reference guide for all students in advanced human resources courses at management schools. Presenting state-of-the art research findings in all of its chapters, the book discusses numerous institutional peculiarities of the developing world, making the results distinct in view of the general scope of labor economics. ER -