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Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results Save | Export
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Abraham, Lisa; Mulhern, Christine; Greer, Lucas – RAND Corporation, 2023
Manufacturing employers often cite challenges to finding and hiring a sufficient number of highly skilled and diverse workers, so it is important to understand how pathways into manufacturing and the retention of manufacturing workers may be improved. The authors of this report address this research gap by examining the pipeline between Ohio's…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Labor Force Development, Education Work Relationship, Labor Supply
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Abraham, Lisa; Mulhern, Christine; Greer, Lucas – RAND Corporation, 2023
The U.S. manufacturing industry is experiencing a resurgence and faces a growing need for highly skilled workers. Recent reports project that demand for highly-skilled manufacturing workers will outpace supply in coming years, and this shortage may grow as the U.S. manufacturing industry grows and its labor needs shift. Furthermore, manufacturing…
Descriptors: Skilled Workers, Manufacturing Industry, Labor Supply, Postsecondary Education
Denning, Jeffrey T. – W. E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, 2017
Higher education has experienced many changes since the 1970s, including an increase in the price of college, an increase in student employment during college, a decrease in college completion rates, and an increase in time to degree. This paper ties these trends together by causally linking changes in financial aid with time to degree and student…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Financial Aid, Correlation, Time to Degree
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VanWey, Leah; Vithayathil, Trina – Rural Sociology, 2013
This article analyzes off-farm work among subsistence-level farmers in the Santarem region of the Brazilian Amazon. We build on the literature on rural livelihoods in the Global South by exploring how the opportunity to work off the farm is embedded in social relationships. We additionally differentiate our analysis by type of off-farm work, and…
Descriptors: Job Security, Probability, Human Capital, Social Capital
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Winslow-Bowe, Sarah – Journal of Family Issues, 2009
Whereas much research has explored the causes and consequences of the gender wage gap, far less has examined earnings differentials within marriage. This article contributes to this literature by utilizing the 2000 wave of the 1979 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth to examine variation in husbands' and wives' relative income by race/ethnicity,…
Descriptors: Wages, Human Capital, Spouses, Mothers
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Heim, Bradley T. – Journal of Human Resources, 2007
This paper demonstrates the extent to which married women's labor supply elasticities have changed over the past quarter century. Estimates from March Current Population Survey data suggest that these elasticities have decreased substantially, by 60 percent for the hours wage elasticity (from 0.36 to 0.14), 70 percent for the hours income…
Descriptors: Wages, Marital Status, Income, Ethnic Groups
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Neal, Derek – Journal of Political Economy, 2004
Existing work suggests that black-white gaps in potential wages are much larger among men than women and further that black-white differences in patterns of female labor supply are unimportant. However, panel data on wages and income sources demonstrate that the modal young black woman who does not engage in market work is a single mother…
Descriptors: Wages, Young Adults, Mothers, Labor Supply
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Ribar, David C. – Journal of Human Resources, 1992
With data from the Survey of Income Program Participation, a three-equation, reduced-form econometric model is used to generate estimates revealing that the cost of market child care decreases the labor force participation of married women. High wages increase likelihood of working and use of paid child care. (SK)
Descriptors: Costs, Day Care, Employed Women, Labor Economics
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Glass, Jennifer; Nath, Leda E. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
This study explores the effect of religious conservatism on the labor force behavior of women who marry or add a new child to their household, using the 1988-1993 National Survey of Families and Households (N = 3,494). We model changes in labor supply, occupation, and wages as a function of either conservative denominational membership or…
Descriptors: Birth, Females, Marriage, Labor Force
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Connelly, Rachel – Journal of Human Resources, 1986
This paper analyzes three models of labor demand solving for the change in wages of a given labor group due to a change in the size of a birth cohort. When the production function includes age-schooling groups as separate factors, an increase in the size of one birth cohort changes the size of several labor market groups. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Age Groups, Labor Market, Labor Needs
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Mangan, John – Australian Bulletin of Labour, 1990
In 1981 the Australian government introduced a system of wage subsidies designed to induce employers to increase job offers to persons with disabilities. This article reports on the effectiveness of the wage subsidy policy and examines some supply characteristics for labor market success by the disabled. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Disadvantaged, Employment Practices, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Taylor, J. Edward; Espenshade, Thomas J. – 1987
The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 contains controversial provisions to allow temporary "replenishment" farmworkers to enter the United States to harvest perishable crops. This paper describes the role of legal and illegal foreign workers in California agriculture in relation to these provisions and the assumptions on which…
Descriptors: Agricultural Laborers, Employment Patterns, Farm Labor, Federal Legislation
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Rengers, Merijn; Madden, Christopher – Australian Bulletin of Labour, 2000
A work preference model of artists' labor supply was applied to data on Australian artists. Results show that artists subsidize their profession by working outside the arts; the higher their nonarts income, the more they subsidize arts work. Artists reduce hours worked in their principal artistic occupation when they receive a higher arts income.…
Descriptors: Artists, Employment Patterns, Fine Arts, Foreign Countries
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Burkhauser, Richard V.; Turner, John A. – Journal Of Political Economy, 1978
Using a time series analysis to test the net empirical importance of the substitution and wealth effects associated with social security on the market of work of younger men, it was found that hours per week worked would have fallen off since 1936 without the present social security system. (Author)
Descriptors: Fringe Benefits, Labor Force, Labor Supply, Males
Boskin, Michael J. – 1973
A model of occupational choice based on the theory of human capital is developed and estimated by conditional logit analysis. The empirical results estimated the probability of individuals with certain characteristics (such as race, sex, age, and education) entering each of 11 occupational groups. The results indicate that individuals tend to…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Economic Research, Federal Aid, Females
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