Abstract
Abstract
Personnel economics has undoubtedly been one of the major developments in mainstream labour economics in recent decades. Its aim is not simply to report on firms’ actual labour management practices but also to prescribe the optimal practices for managers to adopt. The pursuit of this goal has led it to close itself off from other approaches to the analysis of the employment relationship. Drawing on concepts from political science, we show that personnel economics is imbued with a particular conception of politics, even though it goes unacknowledged. Making this point visible enables us to show that other conceptions of politics than that to which personnel economics refers are possible and leads to the acknowledgement of the legitimacy of other points of view in matters of labour management.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Reference73 articles.
1. Edward P. Lazear: a founding father of personnel economics,;Altmann,2011
2. International Encyclopedia of Political Science International encyclopedia of political science
3. Internal labor markets: too many theories, too few facts;Baker;American Economic Review,1995
4. A depressed labor market as explained by participants;Bewley;American Economic Review,1995