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The quality of life experienced by people in the past is one of the
most important areas of historical enquiry, and the standard of
living of populations is one of the leading measures of the
economic performance of nations. Yet how accurate is the
information on which these judgments are based? This collection of
essays, written by renowned scholars in the fields of labour, wage
and welfare history, cogently undermine the validity of the data
that have for decades dominated the measurement of these phenomena
in Britain, Europe and Asia, and provided the statistical backbone
for countless descriptions and analyses of economic development,
welfare and many other prime subjects in economic and social
history. The contributors to this volume rigorously expose
misapprehensions of long-run macroeconomic estimates of the real
wage and provide a host of improved methods and data for revising
and rejecting them. This volume is essential reading for anyone
interested in economic and social history, economics and the
application of statistical methods to historical evidence.
Top pay has risen much faster than average pay in the past 20
years. Today there's widespread public concern about the apparent
excesses of some pay deals in the corporate sector - although
people are more forgiving of the rewards to entrepreneurs,
entertainers and sports stars. This collection of essays puts
various aspects of this debate under the spotlight. It looks at the
role of shareholders in awarding executive pay, examines how pay
data are produced and used, and asks whether Long-Term Incentive
Plans have created unnecessary inflation of executive pay. It also
looks at high pay in the public sector and in areas where
government funding plays a major role - such as universities and
charities. And it investigates the disparity in pay between men and
women among very high earners.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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