Description |
ix, 227 pages ; 24 cm |
Contents |
1. Introduction and Overview: Capitalism and Skill Formation -- 2. Education, Training and Industrialised Economies -- 3. Education, Training and Economic Performance: the Empirical Evidence -- 4. Global Economic Transformation and Skill Trends -- 5. A Theory of Skill Formation Systems -- 6. The Low-Skills Route -- 7. The High-Skills Routes -- 8. Conclusion: A Framework for Policy Analysis |
Summary |
Education, Training and the Global Economy takes issue with the notion that simply more or better education and training will inevitably bring economic success. The authors examine theoretical approaches to education and training before surveying empirical data and our knowledge of current skills trends in the global economy. The institutional and historical determinants of routes to low or high skill formation in industrialized economies are thoroughly considered. Particular attention is paid to the new routes to skill formation found in the dynamic Pacific Rim economies. This book will be welcomed by researchers, policy makers and students concerned with training, education and labour economics |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 193-218) and indexes |
Subject |
Economic development -- Effect of education on.
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Labor supply -- Effect of education on.
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Author |
Green, Francis.
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LC no. |
95042418 |
ISBN |
1852789700 (cased) |
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1852789735 (paperback) |
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