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Competitive Advantage on the Shop Floor
Harvard University Press, 1990 Cloth: 978-0-674-15416-2 Library of Congress Classification HB206.L39 1990 Dewey Decimal Classification 338.47677210941
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK
William Lazonick explores how technological change has interacted with the organization of work, with major consequences for national competitiveness and industrial leadership. Looking at Britain, the United States, and Japan from the nineteenth century to the present, he explains changes in their status as industrial superpowers. Lazonick stresses the importance for industrial leadership of cooperative relations between employers and shop-floor workers. Such relations permit employers to use new technologies to their maximum potential, which in turn transforms the high fixed costs inherent in these technologies into low unit costs and large market shares. Cooperative relations can also lead employers to invest in the skills of workers themselves--skills that enable shop-floor workers to influence quality as well as quantity of production. See other books on: Economics | Labor theory of value | Manufacturing industries | Marxian economics | Shop Floor See other titles from Harvard University Press |
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