Part I.
Introduction: Kaushik Basu, Henrik Horn, Lisa Román, Judith Shapiro.
Part II: The Evolution of Labor Standards:.
1. The History and Political Economy of International Labor Standards: Stanley Engerman (Rochester University).
Commentary 1.1 The Parallels Between the Past and the Present: Jane Humphries (All-Souls College, Oxford University).
Commentary 1.2 Legislation Versus Bargaining Power: The Evolution of Scandinavian Labor Standards: Karl-Ove Moene and Michael Wallerstein (Oslo University).
Part III: The Theory of International Labor Standards:.
2. The Impact of International Labor Standards. A Survey of Economic Theory: Nirvikar Singh (University of California, Santa Cruz).
Commentary 2.1 Old Wine in New Bottles?: T.N. Srinivasan (Yale University).
Commentary 2.2 Governing Labor Relations: Tore Ellingsen (Stockholm School of Economics).
Part IV: The Issue Of Child Labor:.
3. Child Labor: Theory, Evidence and Policy: Drusilla Brown (Tufts University), Alan Deardorff (Michigan University), and Robert Stern (Michigan University).
Commentary 3.1 The Political Economy of Child Labor: Alan Krueger (Princeton University).
Commentary 3.2 Social Norms, Coordination and Policy Issues in the Fight Against Child Labor: Luis-Felipe López-Calva (El Colegio de Mexico).
Part V: The International Organisation and Enforcement of Labor Standards:.
4. A Role For The WTO: Robert Staiger (University of Wisconsin).
Commentary 4.1 Trade and Labor Standards. To Link or Not to Link?: Alan L Winters (University of Sussex).
Commentary 4.2 The Need to Micro-Manage Regulatory Diversity: Petros Mavroidis (University of Neuchatel).
Index.
Kaushik Basu is Professor of Economics and Carl Marks
Professor of International Studies in the Economics Department at
Cornell University. He is Editor of Social Choice and Welfare and
Associate Editor of The Journal of Economic Perspectives and The
Journal of Development Economics. He is the author of many books
and articles, including The Less Developed Economy, (Blackwell
Publishers, 1984), Lectures in Industrial Organization Theory
(Blackwell Publishers, 1993), and Analytical Development Economics
(1997).
Henrik Horn is Professor of International Economics at
Stockholm University. His current research focuses on various
aspects of the WTO, with particular emphasis on the functioning of
its Dispute Settlement system.
Lisa Román is the Secretary to the Expert Group on
Development Issues (EGDI) and has been with the secretariat since
1999. She has a background as a development economist and is the
author of Institutions in Transition: Vietnamese State Bank Reform
(1999).
Judith Shapiro is Professor of Health Economics at the New Economic School, and has been a member of the EGDI since 1995. She is the author of a number of articles on Russian health, labor and mortality, and three co-authored books on transformation and integration in Eastern Europe.
‘Questions relating to international labour standards have been the
subject of much controversy and research as several unions and some
rich-country governments have sought to advance them through
sanctions while most poor-country governments and some important
and sizeable democratic unions in them have opposed this. This
volume is an important and timely contribution to this debate,
providing scholarly and penetrating research to illuminate the
issues at stake. It is a classic that must be studied by everyone
engaged in this debate.’ Jagdish Bhagwati, Columbia University
‘International Labor Standards is an extremely valuable and
wide-ranging introduction to current debates over labor standards.
The book gives a detailed history of standards; a broad and
even-handed view of economic arguments for and against standards;
and serious discussion of the problem of child labor. [It]
concludes with an intriguing analysis of the potential role of the
World Trade Organization in helping to raise standards. In place of
the vitriole and rhetoric that the debate over standards all too
often degenerates into, this volume is a serious investigation of
what we know and do not know in this area.’ Richard Freeman, London
School of Economics
‘This impressive book brings together some of the best research on
the important and controversial topic of international labor
standards. The contributions are illuminating and provocative, and
they provide a valuable scientific foundation for policy debates.’
Kyle Bagwell, Columbia University
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