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Scheible, Paul L. – Monthly Labor Review, 1975
Rates of increase were higher for employees in unionized establishments, and for nonmanufacturing workers. (Author)
Descriptors: Economic Change, Employment Statistics, Fringe Benefits, Occupational Surveys
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Hipple, Steven; Stewart, Jay – Monthly Labor Review, 1996
Contingent workers generally earn less income and are less likely to receive health insurance and pension benefits through their employers than are noncontingent workers. However, many earn higher wages than those in traditional arrangements and have access to health insurance from other sources. (Author)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Fringe Benefits, Health Insurance, Labor Force
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DiNatale, Marisa; Boraas, Stephanie – Monthly Labor Review, 2002
In 2000, women aged 25-34 years participated in the labor force in greater proportions, were more educated, earned more, and enjoyed more labor market benefits than their counterparts 25 years earlier. The earnings gap between young women and men narrowed substantially during the period. (Contains 18 references.) (Author)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Employed Women, Fringe Benefits, Labor Force
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Murphey, Janice D. – Monthly Labor Review, 1978
Although wages rose slightly more than prices in 1977, inflation left workers with generally smaller real income. The article examines various factors affecting wage movements and summarizes 1977 wage changes in the economy as a whole and under collective bargaining agreements. (MF)
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, Cost Indexes, Economic Change, Fringe Benefits
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Dean, Edwin; And Others – Monthly Labor Review, 1986
Manufacturing productivity, as measured by output per hour, rose in 1984 in the United States and 11 other industrial countries studied. (Statistics are presented in the following areas: productivity trends, employment and hours, hourly compensation, unit labor costs, and relative productivity and labor cost trends.) (CT)
Descriptors: Economic Climate, Employment, Fringe Benefits, Labor Economics
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Kochan, Thomas A. – Monthly Labor Review, 1980
Discusses various elements of industrial relations research: general directions for research; outcomes and effects of bargaining; determination of wages and economic benefits; nonmonetary bargaining; improving labor-management relations; grievance procedures and arbitration; public sector labor-management relations; policy formation and…
Descriptors: Administration, Arbitration, Collective Bargaining, Employer Employee Relationship