This work examines the relationship between the rapid technological and economic growth characteristic of high technology districts and their distinct labor market institutions - short job tenures, rapid turnover, flat firm hierarchies, weak internal labor markets, high use of temporary labor, unusual uses of independent contracting, little unionization, unusual employee organization (e.g., chat groups, and ethnic organization), unequal income, minimal employment discrimination litigation, flexible compensation (especially stock options), and heavy use of immigrants on short-term visas. The author suggests that while these distinctive labor market institutions are somewhat unorthodox and may present legal problems, they play essential roles in high growth.
By:
Alan Hyde
Imprint: Routledge
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 229mm,
Width: 152mm,
Spine: 26mm
Weight: 453g
ISBN: 9780765607508
ISBN 10: 0765607506
Pages: 288
Publication Date: 31 May 2001
Audience:
College/higher education
,
Professional and scholarly
,
Professional & Vocational
,
A / AS level
,
Further / Higher Education
Format: Hardback
Publisher's Status: Active
Chapter 1 The Development of Silicon Valley’s High-Velocity Labor Market; Part I The Information Story; Chapter 2 Mobile Employees, Information Spillover, and Trade Secrets; Chapter 3 A New Economic Analysis of Trade Secrets Law From an Economics of Information Perspective; Chapter 4 Information Ownership and Transmission by Mobile Employees: Alternative Economic Approaches; Part II The Flexibility Story; Chapter 5 How Flexible Labor is Hired I: Temporary Help Employees Who Work at One Client (“Permatemps”); Chapter 6 How Flexible Labor is Hired II: Independent Contractors; Chapter 7 H-1B Visas; Part III Labor Market Intermediaries: Information and Flexibility; Chapter 8 Labor Market Intermediaries: Matching Workers to Jobs; Chapter 9 Employee Organization: Networks, Ethnic Organization, New Unions; Part IV Flexible (and Informational) Compensation; Chapter 10 Stock Options: Their Law and Economics; Chapter 11 Market Failure in Retirement Savings and Health Insurance; Part V Inequality; Chapter 12 Employment Discrimination? how a Meritocracy Creates Disparate Labor Market Outcomes Through Demands for Skills at Hiring, Networks of Employees, Entrepreneurial Tendencies;