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noneHu, Ke-hsun 18 August 2000 (has links)
Abstract
¡@¡@Being in a fast-changing medical market environment, hospitals usually face high uncertainty. The best strategy of keeping survive is being flexible. Human resource is the most important resource in hospital, so it is critical to realize the relationship between workforce flexibility and hospital performance.
¡@¡@The purposes of this study are discussing about the workforce flexibility in hospital. Questionnaire was mailed to 568 hospitals are accredited as district hospitals or above in Taiwan, and the answers are 117 with 21.0% answer percentage. Data is processed with the statistic software SPSS. The results of this research indicate that:
1. Different organization characteristics are significantly different in numerical flexibility in hospital.
2. Different organization characteristics are significantly different in wage flexibility in hospital.
3. Different organization characteristics are significantly different in soft performance in hospital.
4. Different organization characteristics are significantly different in the average growth rate of doctor in hospital.
5. Different organization characteristics are significantly different in the average rate of patient occupied in hospital.
6. Different organization characteristics are significantly different in the average productivity of employee in hospital.
7. The workforce flexibility has significantly positively influences on soft performance in hospital.
8. The workforce flexibility has significantly positively influences on the average growth rate of patient.
9. The workforce flexibility has significantly positively influences on the average rate of patient occupied in hospital.
10. The workforce flexibility has significantly positively influences on the average productivity of employee in hospital.
Key words: workforce flexibility, functional flexibility, numerical flexibility, wage flexibility, performance
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Heterogeneous Firms, Labor Union and Minimum Wage RatioKuo, Shih-Ming 24 July 2008 (has links)
This study constructs a analytical framework in which the Labor Union has full bargaining power and firms are heterogeneous to analyze the economic effect for adjustment of minimum wage ratio. There are two features in this model. First, every firm shows heterogeneity in productivity and survivors of the market are only those with good productivity. Second, the labor union has sufficient power to bargain wage ratio. The main findings of this study include:
1. Increase in the minimum wage ratio raises the survival threshold and labor wage ratio, but decreases the numbers of firms.
2. Increase in the minimum wage ratio does not necessarily result in decrease of labor demand.
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Optimal Incentive Wage Package for Screening Workers' Intrinsic Motivation.Hsu, Shu-Chen 31 July 2008 (has links)
The intrinsic features of woker, ``ability' and ``motivation', are useful resources of human capital that makes profit for the firm.
The purpose of the study is to examine how the firm designs the optimal wage policy when worker's intrinsic features are private information.
The study follows the mechainsm-design approach, by which models with single, as well as double,
intrinsic feature(s) of worker are established, and best ``incentive wage packages' are deduced. We finded out that, under single intrinsic feature, the firm's optimal wage package entails that, the more output the higher wages; under double intrinsic features, the firm must takes the relative strength of intrinsic features of the worker into account when making the optimal incentive wage package.
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A study on changes of wage distribution in Korea, 1976-1998, from the perspective of skill-based technological changesKang, Myung Soo, January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2001. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 201-203). Also available on the Internet.
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The fate of organized labor : explaining unionization, wage inequality, and strikes across time and space /Oskarsson, Sven. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Uppsala University, 2003. / Added thesis t.p. and abstract inserted. Includes bibliographical references.
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A study on changes of wage distribution in Korea, 1976-1998, from the perspective of skill-based technological changes /Kang, Myung Soo, January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2001. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 201-203). Also available on the Internet.
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Government policy towards employee benefits in the private sector : the case of Workmen's Compensation Ordinance /Cheung, Wai-king, Lilian, January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (M. Soc. Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 1981.
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Consuming the Maya : an ethnography of eating and being in the land of the Caste WarsO'Connor, Amber Marie 30 June 2014 (has links)
This dissertation is an ethnographic work describing how foodways have become central to identity negotiation in a Maya village that has recently been impacted by evangelical conversion and tourism. This village is in the region of Quintana Roo, Mexico best known for its involvement in the Caste Wars of Yucatán and historic resistance to assimilation to Mexican identity. However, in recent years, the demand for inexpensive labor in the hotel zone of the Caribbean coast of Quintana Roo has led to improved infrastructure and transportation to these villages. With this improved infrastructure has come increased outside interaction including the establishment of evangelical churches and day labor buses. These combined influences of religion and labor changes have led to new ways of negotiating identity that had not previously existed in village life here. Because life in this village had always centered on subsistence farming and its associated food getting and food making tasks, the option for wage labor and evangelical religion have provided a support system for those unable or unwilling to participate in traditional forms of subsistence. The new social structures are often negotiated using food and foodways as a declaration of belonging or resistance. My work provides vignettes describing these processes of identity negotiation at the national, regional and familial levels. / text
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The impact of minimum wages ordinance on the performance of building attendant in building management industryCheung, Ho-leung, 張浩良 January 2013 (has links)
The Minimum Wage Ordinance was introduced since 1 May 2011. It was widely discussed among the society on how it affects the economy and the market nature of Hong Kong. Employer has carried out different measures on either changing the term of employment contract or raise up the requirement for the employee as to compensate the addition salary cost they have paid under this regulation.
Being a participant in building management service, we observe that owners/ residents rise up their expectation on the performance of building attendant. They believe the increase of salary under MWO would motivate the building attendant on their work and it would also attract more candidates with higher qualification and personal ability to join the service sector. However, there is a variation between the expectation and the reality.
This research is attempted to identify whether the implementation of MWO would improve the performance of building attendant and what are the factors of giving such impact by studying the change of labour market of building management and the result of customer satisfaction survey conduct in this research. From these findings, we would try to verify if there is any direct relationship between MWO and building staff performance and recommend some appropriate strategy to owners/resident on how to improve the performance of building attendant. / published_or_final_version / Housing Management / Master / Master of Housing Management
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Essays on skill biased technological change and human capitalLu, Qian 08 September 2015 (has links)
This dissertation studies determinants of the U.S. labor market structure and human capital development, with a focus on technological change. A key feature of the U.S. labor market since 1980 is the substantial growth of the employment in high skill occupations and there is a substantial literature attributing this change to technological change. However, since 1999, the employment growth of high skill occupations has decelerated markedly despite continued rapid growth in technology. The first essay documents this novel trend and examines the role of technological change in explaining this phenomenon. It shows that technological advancements since the late 1990s, such as the onset of Internet, have expanded what computers can do and become substitutes for high skill occupations. This change can explain a substantial portion of the stagnancy in employment growth for high skill occupation in the 2000s. The second essay examines the role of computer adoption in explaining the differences in the change of gender wage gap between 1980 and 2000 across cities in the United States. It uses the city-level routine task intensity in 1980 to predict the subsequent increase in computer adoption and shows that cities with one percent greater increase in computer adoption experienced a 0.7 percent more decrease in the change of male-female wage ratio between 1980 and 2000. Computerization explains about 50 percent of the decline in the male-female wage gap between 1980 and 2000. The third essay studies the causal effect of maternal education on the gender gap in children’s non-cognitive skills. It shows that maternal education reduces boys’ disadvantage in non-cognitive behaviors relative to girls at age 7. To explain the mechanism of this effect, it provides suggestive evidence that better educated mothers spend more time going outings with boys while reading to girls at age 7, and going outings could be more closely related to non-cognitive development than reading.
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