Abstract
The sphere of wage labor plays a significant role in achieving the sustainable development of the Russian economy. This article analyzes empirical data on the formation of a new macroeconomic model of wage labor. The main aim of this work is to identify the basic principles of qualitative macroeconomic change from the perspective of the additive and subtractive effects of conversion and deconversion of wage labor. The hypothesis of this study is that the complex and diverse institutional transformations of wage labor within the federal districts of Russia determine the patterns and priorities for the deployment of conversion and deconversion of wage labor and the differences in their capitalization strategies. Based on this analysis, the author explores the general trends and priorities of macroeconomic change in wage labor to ensure its modern transformation. The empirical basis of this study is statistical data and analytical reviews from the Federal State Statistics Service and the International Labor Organization for the period 2008-2018, as well as the results from a computer survey of employed workers. Based on a synergetic approach, this study investigates the fundamentals of the transformation of wage labor and the essential characteristics of both conversion and deconversion in the Federal Districts of Russia. The scientific novelty of this research lies in the identification of applied imperatives for conversion and deconversion in wage labor in Russia, which has allowed us to segment the Federal Districts according to their multiplicative effects on the conversion and deconversion of the work sphere. The findings obtained aim to assist in solving the problems associated with the formation of an innovative, macroeconomic model of wage labor within the Federal Districts and the country at large.
Published Version
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