German model

http://dbpedia.org/resource/German_model an entity of type: Thing

غالبًا ما يستخدم مصطلح النموذج الألماني في الاقتصاد لوصف وسائل ألمانيا الغربية بعد الحرب العالمية الثانية لاستخدام (وفقًا لجامعة كوليدج في لندن البروفيسور ويندي كارلين) العلاقات الصناعية المبتكرة والتدريب المهني وعلاقات أوثق بين القطاعين المالي والصناعي لزراعة الازدهار الاقتصادي. rdf:langString
The term German model is most often used in economics to describe post-World War II West Germany's means of using (according to University College London Professor Wendy Carlin) innovative industrial relations, vocational training, and closer relationships between the financial and industrial sectors to cultivate economic prosperity. The two key components of the German model is a national system for certifying industrial and artisan skills, as well as full union participation in the oversight of plant-based vocation training. rdf:langString
rdf:langString النموذج الألماني
rdf:langString German model
xsd:integer 1559449
xsd:integer 1120570842
rdf:langString غالبًا ما يستخدم مصطلح النموذج الألماني في الاقتصاد لوصف وسائل ألمانيا الغربية بعد الحرب العالمية الثانية لاستخدام (وفقًا لجامعة كوليدج في لندن البروفيسور ويندي كارلين) العلاقات الصناعية المبتكرة والتدريب المهني وعلاقات أوثق بين القطاعين المالي والصناعي لزراعة الازدهار الاقتصادي.
rdf:langString The term German model is most often used in economics to describe post-World War II West Germany's means of using (according to University College London Professor Wendy Carlin) innovative industrial relations, vocational training, and closer relationships between the financial and industrial sectors to cultivate economic prosperity. The two key components of the German model is a national system for certifying industrial and artisan skills, as well as full union participation in the oversight of plant-based vocation training. The German model of collective bargaining differs from the model common in other European countries and the United States. In Germany, unions and employer associations bargain at the industry-region level. In contrast to tripartite corporatist systems, the German government is not involved in the negotiations. These large-scale agreements have broad coverage and lead to considerable standardization in wages and employment conditions across the country. Some bargaining occurs at the firm level.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 14898

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