The Labor Force in Meiji Economic Growth: A Quantitative Study of Yamanashi Prefecture

1966 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arlon Tussing

Economic development and “modernization” have certain universal consequences for the structure and organization of the labor force. The history of each advanced country shows a shift of population out of agriculture and the replacement of family enterprise and particularistic employment relationships by large enterprise and wage labor. But the pace and completeness of these inevitable changes have varied widely among different countries.

1996 ◽  
Vol 11 (0) ◽  
pp. 257-267
Author(s):  
Jin-Hyung Jin

Jean Jacques Rousseau, (1712-1778) author of "The Theory of Social Contract", once stated that moral corruption and indulgence in luxury by people increases as their economic well-being improves. The history of mankind attests to the fact that there have been many nations which enjoyed remarkable economic development, but perished in the long run due to degradation of humanity, corruption, luxury, widespread mammonism, and various conflicts among their people. It follows that the economic growth should be accompanied by or based on people's strong morality and sound humanity. In other words, the reformation of consciousness is a prerequisite to the economic development. It is said that the Republic of Korea garnered an economic growth to the extent that it is on the threshold of becoming an advanced country in the near future.


1979 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-175
Author(s):  
Roger J. Beck

Research which is designed to evaluate the strength and mix of factors which tend to initiate and sustain economic growth must provide methods of measuring these factors. If one of these factors is taken to be the availability of labor as the Committee on Economic Development in the Northeast (1977) suggests, then methods of measuring the availability of labor need to be developed. Articles by Bonnen (1972) and Gardner (1975) have provided researchers with an incentive to do a better job of operationalizing and measuring the concept of labor availability.


Author(s):  
Maureen Dunne ◽  
Martha Meaney ◽  
Fahlino Sjuib ◽  
Charles Schumacher ◽  
Sean Stevens

In the current economy, states and substate regions seek to identify the sources of economic growth in order to improve economic development efforts.  The objectives of the paper are threefold.  First, using selected economic criteria, we examine the growth in the labor force of the substate region.  Second, using selected economic indicators, we detect the existence of growth in employment, establishments, payroll and wages in the substate region.  Finally, we explore the causal relationship among selected economic variables in the substate region and determine the direction of causality between variables.  Several techniques and analyses are used in this study, including labor force analysis, location quotients, and the error correction model. The methodology and economic indicators used in this research can be applied to similar substate regions allowing comparison among regions and facilitating regional economic development efforts.


Author(s):  
N. Wu ◽  
X. Zhang

Kuqa, Xinjiang, is located at northwestern inland china. Traditionally a bridge between eastern and western civilizations, Kuqa had a history of cultural fusion and was left with abundant cultural heritage. As population increase, economic growth and social changes occurred, spontaneous renovation of the old city was affected, in which street fabric and scenes underwent damages. The paper demonstrates attempts made in various projects to achieve conservation of cultural heritage in agreement with economic development and improvement of living condition. The lessons learnt in these projects will be of value to development of other historic cities, especially in minority ethnic regions in China.


Author(s):  
Ni Komang Pande Wiasih ◽  
Ni Luh Karmini

The condition of labor absorption shows that the higher the unemployment rate, the higher the poverty, crime, and socio-economic phenomena in society. Absorption of labor is one of the supporters of economic development carried out by developing countries and has the aim, among others, to create equitable economic development. This study aims: 1) To determine the effect of economic growth, the number of the workforce, and the wage level simultaneously on the absorption of district/city workers in the Province of Bali; 2) To determine the effect of economic growth, the number of labor force, and the partial wage level on the absorption of labor in districts/cities in Bali Province. The data used is secondary data from 2010 – 2019 with quantitative and qualitative data types, then the data is processed using multiple linear regression analysis techniques. The results of this study indicate that: 1) Economic growth, the number of labor force, and the level of wages simultaneously affect the absorption of labor; 2) Partially, economic growth has no effect on employment. The number of labor force and the wage level partially have a positive and significant effect on labor absorption.


1975 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 3-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard L. Rudolph

The wealth of literature published in the last twenty-five years on economic growth, economic development, and comparative economic history contains little information about Austria-Hungary. Fortunately, this situation shows signs of improving as the few recent articles and monographs on the subject are beginning to be utilized in the more general literature. Although the general lack of attention to Austria-Hungary clearly indicates that serious analytical work on the economic history of the area is still in a very early stage, the relatively few studies published on the subject have already changed the views of scholars on economic developments in the Habsburg lands.


Author(s):  
Umit Hacioglu ◽  
Hasan Dincer

<p>The success of economic transition for countries mainly requires economic and politic stability. However the conflict paradigm affects the nature of economic transition. In this process, innovations have changed product technologies which have been required by economic growth. Presently, automation in standardized production industry is used as if it will take over the wage labor. Crises brought uniformities into agenda. Computer integrated manufacturing appeared in the midst of 1990s. However, production still tended to move to other countries with cheaper labor. The study focuses on interaction between the conflict and market mechanism in the light of the knowledge-based economic development.</p>


Author(s):  
David E. Bloom ◽  
Michael Kuhn ◽  
Klaus Prettner

The strong observable correlation between health and economic growth is crucial for economic development and sustained well-being, but the underlying causality and mechanisms are difficult to conceptualize. Three issues are of central concern. First, assessing and disentangling causality between health and economic growth are empirically challenging. Second, the relation between health and economic growth changes over the process of economic development. In less developed countries, poor health often reduces labor force participation, particularly among women, and deters investments in education such that fertility stays high and the economy remains trapped in a stagnation equilibrium. By contrast, in more developed countries, health investments primarily lead to rising longevity, which may not significantly affect labor force participation and workforce productivity. Third, different dimensions of health (mortality vs. morbidity, children’s and women’s health, and health at older ages) relate to different economic effects. By changing the duration and riskiness of the life course, mortality affects individual investment choices, whereas morbidity relates more directly to work productivity and education. Children’s health affects their education and has long-lasting implications for labor force participation and productivity later in life. Women’s health is associated with substantial intergenerational spillover effects and influences women’s empowerment and fertility decisions. Finally, health at older ages has implications for retirement and care.


2021 ◽  
pp. 66-68
Author(s):  
Samuel Cohn

This chapter discusses how raiding was the foundation of Western economic growth. It is also an active component of economic development in the Global South today. Capitalism may operate through the voluntaristic choices of the free market, but it reinforces itself with coercion. The technical term for modern-day raiding is “primitive accumulation,” a word used by Karl Marx to describe the origin of capitalism. The chapter then considers how the United States is an example of capitalism based on forcible land acquisition. In the Global South, land is often just taken away by plain, ordinary coercion. Colombia has a particularly violent history of land seizure. The chapter looks at the scale and violence of contemporary expropriation in Colombia.


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