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  • Diversity between and within varieties of capitalism: transnational survey evidence

    Author(s)
    T. Walker, James
    Brewster, Christopher
    Wood, Geoffery
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Wood, Geoffery
    Year published
    2014
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    One of the central debates in contemporary socio-economics concerns the relationship between institutions and firm-level practices and the persistence of a number of alternative viable models for economic development. We examine diversity within and between specific types of capitalism using data from a transnational survey incorporating 14 organizational level practices in a sample of six capitalist archetypes, constituting 27 countries and some 6503 firms. We focus on one of the key-defining features of different varieties of capitalism, the interdependence of employers and employees. We find that there are clustering ...
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    One of the central debates in contemporary socio-economics concerns the relationship between institutions and firm-level practices and the persistence of a number of alternative viable models for economic development. We examine diversity within and between specific types of capitalism using data from a transnational survey incorporating 14 organizational level practices in a sample of six capitalist archetypes, constituting 27 countries and some 6503 firms. We focus on one of the key-defining features of different varieties of capitalism, the interdependence of employers and employees. We find that there are clustering tendencies, consistent with the literature, but also considerable diversity within as well as between the varieties, although we did not find "diffuse diversity" or homogeneity. The analysis supports a complex and nuanced relationship within and between varieties of capitalism that has not been previously captured in the literature.
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    Journal Title
    Industrial and Corporate Change
    Volume
    23
    Issue
    2
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1093/icc/dtt014
    Subject
    Organisational Planning and Management
    Applied Economics
    Business and Management
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/69414
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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