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Davis, W. M.; Sleemi, Fehmida – Monthly Labor Review, 1989
The author discusses labor contracts subject to renegotiation during 1989. These contracts cover 36 percent of the workers under all major agreements in the United States. Issues that will affect collective bargaining, including the economy and negotiation trends, are discussed. The author provides information on bargaining in key industries. (CH)
Descriptors: Adults, Arbitration, Collective Bargaining, Labor Force
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Cattan, Peter – Monthly Labor Review, 1988
The author documents the increasing number of Hispanic workers in the work force between 1980 and 1987. This population accounts for approximately one-fifth of employment growth in the United States. The author states that Hispanic women have shown the biggest gains; their employment levels have grown at 250 percent the rate of other women's. (CH)
Descriptors: Adults, Employment Patterns, Hispanic Americans, Labor Force
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Cohen, Philip N.; Bianchi, Suzanne M. – Monthly Labor Review, 1999
Estimates of the level of women's full-time employment are greatly affected by the choice of reference period and population. As states attempt to move poor mothers from welfare to work, a tendency may arise to overestimate how much mothers of young children work for pay. (Author)
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Parents, Labor Force, Mothers
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Fullerton, Howard N., Jr. – Monthly Labor Review, 1999
Labor force diversity will continue to increase; as the baby boom generation gets older, the median age of the labor force will rise to record levels. (Author)
Descriptors: Adults, Aging (Individuals), Employment Projections, Labor Force
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Shaw, Lois B.; Shapiro, David – Monthly Labor Review, 1987
When they were in their early twenties, women in the National Longitudinal Surveys' sample underestimated their future work involvement. Expectations for working at age 35 gradually increased. Plans for working were significant independent predictors of actual work behavior and planning to work yielded a significant wage advantage. (CH)
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Labor Force Nonparticipants, Long Range Planning
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Szafran, Robert F. – Monthly Labor Review, 2002
A proposed new age-adjusted measure for calculating labor force participation rate eliminates the effect of changes in the age distribution. According to the new criterion, increases in women's labor force participation from 1960-2000 would have been even greater of shifts in the age distribution had not occurred. (Contains 12 references.) (JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Age, Data Analysis, Employed Women
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Headd, Brian – Monthly Labor Review, 2000
Small businesses employ slightly more than half of the private sector work force. In many ways, such as education, race, origin, age, and part-time status, the small business work force differs from that of larger enterprises (Author)
Descriptors: Adults, Demography, Employees, Individual Characteristics
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Ruben, George – Monthly Labor Review, 1989
Reviews labor contracts renegotiated during 1988, placing emphasis on labor-management relations. Provides information on negotiations in the following industries: (1) trucking, (2) air transportation, (3) automobile manufacturing, (4) steel and other metals, (5) rubber, (6) bituminous coal, (7) forest products, and (8) shipbuilding. Covers…
Descriptors: Adults, Arbitration, Collective Bargaining, Contracts
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Fullerton, Howard N., Jr. – Monthly Labor Review, 1999
Women's labor force participation rates have increased significantly over the past 50 years, narrowing the gap been rates for women and men. However, aging will play a dominant role in the rates for 2015-2025. (Author)
Descriptors: Adults, Aging (Individuals), Employed Women, Employment Patterns
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Licht, Walter – Monthly Labor Review, 1988
Reviews the role and the accomplishments of the United States Department of Labor in its 75 years of existence. Describes the department's establishment during an era of heavy union activity. Discusses changes in demographics of the labor force, conditions and standards, the work experience, and job placement. (CH)
Descriptors: Adults, Employment Patterns, Labor Force, Quality of Working Life
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Young, Anne McDougall – Monthly Labor Review, 1981
The 1970s were marked by an increase in the level of education attainment of the average worker. By 1979 thirty-six per cent of all workers over 18 completed at least one year of college, and the percentage of workers not completing high school declined considerably. While the proportion of men participating in the labor force continued to fall,…
Descriptors: Adults, Demography, Educational Attainment, Employment Patterns
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Kutscher, Ronald E. – Monthly Labor Review, 1987
Bureau of Labor Statistics projections show 21 million new jobs over the 1986-2000 period. Most new jobs will be in the service-producing industries. The Black and Hispanic labor force is estimated to increase much faster than that of whites. These projections have several important implications. (CH)
Descriptors: Adults, Education Work Relationship, Employment Projections, Futures (of Society)
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Silvestri, George T.; Lukasiewicz, John M. – Monthly Labor Review, 1987
According to Bureau of Labor Statistics projections, there will be 139 million persons in the labor force in the year 2000; this represents a slowdown in the growth rate afer 1986. Minority groups are expected to increase their representation in the labor pool. (CH)
Descriptors: Adults, Education Work Relationship, Employment Projections, Futures (of Society)
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Cohany, Sharon R. – Monthly Labor Review, 1992
Comparison of labor force activity of Vietnam-era veterans and nonveterans shows few differences in employment status. However, although earnings were similar overall, veterans outearned nonveterans at lower educational levels, and those who served outside the war zone earned significantly more than war-zone veterans and nonveterans. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Disabilities, Educational Attainment, Employment Patterns
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Sekscenski, Edward S. – Monthly Labor Review, 1981
Findings are presented from a May 1969 survey on the growing number of "moonlighters" in the work force: (1) one in twenty workers held more than one job during the survey week; (2) three of every ten multiple jobholders were women, nearly double the proportion of 1969; (3) the number of men with multiple jobs remained about the same; (4) the…
Descriptors: Adults, Blacks, Career Education, Employed Women
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