Description

Book Synopsis

In recent years the German economy has grown sluggishly and created few new jobs. These developments have led observers to question the future viability of a model that in the past seemed able to combine economic growth, competitiveness in export markets, and low social inequality. This volume brings together empirical and comparative research from across the social sciences to examine whether or not Germany's system of skill provision is still capable of meeting the economic and social challenges now facing all the advanced capitalist economies. At issue is the question of whether or not the celebrated German training system, an essential element of the high-skill, high-wage equilibrium, can continue to provide the skills necessary for German companies to hold their economic niche in a world characterized by increasing trade and financial interdependence. Combining an examination of the competitiveness of the German training system with an analysis of the robustness of the political institutions that support it, this volume seeks to understand the extent to which the German system for imparting craft skills can adjust to changes in the organization of production in the advanced industrial states.



Table of Contents

Part I: Threats to the German System: Is It Affordable? Is it Competitive?
Part II: Labor Market Outcomes of the German Training System
Part III: Comparative Perspectives on In-firm Training

The German Skills Machine: Sustaining Comparative

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    A Paperback / softback by Pepper D. Culpepper, David Finegold

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      View other formats and editions of The German Skills Machine: Sustaining Comparative by Pepper D. Culpepper

      Publisher: Berghahn Books, Incorporated
      Publication Date: 01/10/2001
      ISBN13: 9781571812964, 978-1571812964
      ISBN10: 1571812962

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In recent years the German economy has grown sluggishly and created few new jobs. These developments have led observers to question the future viability of a model that in the past seemed able to combine economic growth, competitiveness in export markets, and low social inequality. This volume brings together empirical and comparative research from across the social sciences to examine whether or not Germany's system of skill provision is still capable of meeting the economic and social challenges now facing all the advanced capitalist economies. At issue is the question of whether or not the celebrated German training system, an essential element of the high-skill, high-wage equilibrium, can continue to provide the skills necessary for German companies to hold their economic niche in a world characterized by increasing trade and financial interdependence. Combining an examination of the competitiveness of the German training system with an analysis of the robustness of the political institutions that support it, this volume seeks to understand the extent to which the German system for imparting craft skills can adjust to changes in the organization of production in the advanced industrial states.



      Table of Contents

      Part I: Threats to the German System: Is It Affordable? Is it Competitive?
      Part II: Labor Market Outcomes of the German Training System
      Part III: Comparative Perspectives on In-firm Training

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