2015
DOI: 10.1016/s2212-5671(15)00310-x
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Household Income in Romania. A Challenge to Economic and Social Cohesion

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Cited by 11 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…This is evidenced by many empirical studies (Nawab & Bhatti, 2011;Rahaman, Mohani & Rahman, 2016), so this mechanism should be used to build employees' commitment, but also other positive outcomes and phenomena related to them, such as job satisfaction, performance, organizational citizenship behaviour, etc. (Barber, Dunham & Formisano, 1992;Chivu, Ciutacu & Georgescu, 2015).…”
Section: Discussion and Implications For Human Resources Managersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is evidenced by many empirical studies (Nawab & Bhatti, 2011;Rahaman, Mohani & Rahman, 2016), so this mechanism should be used to build employees' commitment, but also other positive outcomes and phenomena related to them, such as job satisfaction, performance, organizational citizenship behaviour, etc. (Barber, Dunham & Formisano, 1992;Chivu, Ciutacu & Georgescu, 2015).…”
Section: Discussion and Implications For Human Resources Managersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If we analyse the median gross hourly earnings in 2016 (Eurostat 2016), the position of Croatia is even worse as Croatian employees earn only 10 EUR hourly, which is 4.3 times less than in Denmark, and 3 times less than gross hourly earnings in EU-28 countries. Only Bulgaria (4.4 EUR), Romania (5.5 EUR) (Chivu, Ciutacu & Georgescu, 2015), Latvia (7.5 EUR), Lithuania (8 EUR) and Poland (8.4 EUR) have lower gross hourly earnings than Croatia. Ireland, which has been attracting increasing numbers of young people from Croatia, has almost three times higher gross hourly earnings (29.3 EUR) and 3.7 times higher average annual earnings than Croatia.…”
Section: Comparative Analysis Of Reward Strategy and Practice Betweenmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One of the key issues in these countries today is the dramatic increase in labor shortages, which has been influenced by a variety of factors, namely outbound labor migration after the change of regime, unfavorable demographic factors, the economic downturn as well as wage differences within the EU (Brixiova, Li & Yousef, 2009). Chivu, Ciutacu and Georgescu (2015) underline that statistic data seem to indicate that the trend in household income, particularly in the new member states, does not argue for a growth of economic and social cohesion.…”
Section: The Labour Market Of Central and Eastern Europementioning
confidence: 99%