David Gleicher and Lonnie Stevans present a theory of
occupational wage rates that is a classical alternative to human
capital theory. They introduce the net employment reserve, a novel
explanatory variable that measures the bargaining power of
employees in an occupation. An econometric model which includes net
reserves is designed and tested. Results suggest standard empirical
tests of human capital theory are misspecified. Other topics
include: the origin of the firm, screening hypothesis,
wage-efficiency, internal labor markets, and labor-market
segmentation. This work offers insight into the theoretical and
econometric modeling of labor specialization, as well as wage-rate
differentials among occupations. It addresses researchers and
graduate students in labor economics, classical price theory, and
general political economy.
Gleicher and Stevans design an empirical study of the
determination of occupational wage-rates, testing the net reserve
against other hypothesized variables. Their first two chapters
model relative wage rates within a broad classical conception: a
simple model of relative prices is extended by incorporating
relative wage rates according to occupation and training services.
(The authors discuss the implications of these extensions with
regard to the labor theory of value.) A testable hypothesis is put
forth in Chapters 3 and 4. The fifth and final chapter presents
econometric results.
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