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You're Paid What You're Worth

Title
You're Paid What You're Worth / Jake Rosenfeld.
ISBN
9780674250857
Publication
Cambridge, MA : Harvard University Press, [2021]
Copyright Notice Date
©2020
Physical Description
1 online resource (320 p.)
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
In English.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
A myth-busting book challenges the idea that we're paid according to objective criteria and places power and social conflict at the heart of economic analysis.Your pay depends on your productivity and occupation. If you earn roughly the same as others in your job, with the precise level determined by your performance, then you're paid market value. And who can question something as objective and impersonal as the market? That, at least, is how many of us tend to think. But according to Jake Rosenfeld, we need to think again.Job performance and occupational characteristics do play a role in determining pay, but judgments of productivity and value are also highly subjective. What makes a lawyer more valuable than a teacher? How do you measure the output of a police officer, a professor, or a reporter? Why, in the past few decades, did CEOs suddenly become hundreds of times more valuable than their employees? The answers lie not in objective criteria but in battles over interests and ideals. In this contest four dynamics are paramount: power, inertia, mimicry, and demands for equity. Power struggles legitimize pay for particular jobs, and organizational inertia makes that pay seem natural. Mimicry encourages employers to do what peers are doing. And workers are on the lookout for practices that seem unfair. Rosenfeld shows us how these dynamics play out in real-world settings, drawing on cutting-edge economics, original survey data, and a journalistic eye for compelling stories and revealing details.At a time when unions and bargaining power are declining and inequality is rising, You're Paid What You're Worth is a crucial resource for understanding that most basic of social questions: Who gets what and why?
Variant and related titles
De Gruyter University Press eBook pilot project 2020.
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
June 17, 2022
Contents
Frontmatter
CONTENTS
part I: questions about pay
1. What Does Determine Our Pay?
2. What Do We Think Determines Our Pay?
part II: paying for performance?
3. Employers Against the Free Market
4. Mismeasuring Performance and the Pitfalls of Paying for Merit
5. The Bosses' Boss
part III: paying for the job?
6. When Good Jobs Go Bad
7. Bad Jobs Can Be Good
part IV: toward a fairer wage
8. Rethinking Inequality
9. Toward a Fairer Wage
Epilogue: What Foot Soldiers Deserve
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index
Citation

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