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Monthly Labor Review | 12 |
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Herman, Arthur S. | 3 |
Capdevielle, Patricia | 2 |
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Ferris, John W. | 1 |
Franklin, James C. | 1 |
Guzda, Henry P. | 1 |
Huffstutler, Clyde E. | 1 |
Kutscher, Ronald E. | 1 |
Mark, Jerome A. | 1 |
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Huffstutler, Clyde E.; Riche, Martha Farnsworth – Monthly Labor Review, 1972
Due to growing productivity in the bakery products industry, increasing demand may not lead to increased man-hours. (BH)
Descriptors: Automation, Bakery Industry, Employment Patterns, Labor Needs

Guzda, Henry P. – Monthly Labor Review, 1984
Labor-management cooperation to improve the quality of products and work life are traced to the early nineteenth century. Government activities in labor relations and experiments in industrial democracy in the United States and abroad are described. (SK)
Descriptors: Cooperation, Employer Employee Relationship, Industry, Labor Relations

Capdevielle, Patricia; Alvarez, Donato – Monthly Labor Review, 1981
Manufacturing productivity slowed or declined in 1980 and unit labor costs accelerated, as output generally turned downward in the United States and 10 industrial nations; compensation was up in most countries but was offset by gains in consumer prices. (Author)
Descriptors: Compensation (Remuneration), Developed Nations, Labor Economics, Manufacturing Industry

Herman, Arthur S. – Monthly Labor Review, 1986
Productivity, as measured by output per employee hour, grew in 1984 in about three quarters of the industries for which the Bureau of Labor Statistics regularly publishes data. (A table shows productivity trends in industries measured by the Bureau, including mining, transportation and utilities, and trade and services.) (CT)
Descriptors: Economic Climate, Industry, Mining, Productivity

Herman, Arthur S.; Ferris, John W. – Monthly Labor Review, 1982
Productivity in farm machinery manufacturing is examined. The authors discuss how the national economy affects productivity, how the growth of agriculture and technology has changed the industry, and how future trends may cause change in the industry. (CT)
Descriptors: Agricultural Machinery, Agriculture, Computers, Economic Factors

Franklin, James C. – Monthly Labor Review, 1993
By 2005, U.S. employment is expected to increase by 26.4 million, a 1.5% annual rate. Services will provide more than half of new job growth. Construction will add jobs; manufacturing employment will decline. Public sector employment will grow more slowly than average. (SK)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Employment Projections, Government Employees, Manufacturing Industry

Personick, Valeria A. – Monthly Labor Review, 1979
Slower employment growth in most industries, a reversal of the trend toward a larger share of jobs in the public sector, and a return to more rapid productivity gains are some of the highlights of the Bureau of Labor Statistics' latest long-range projections of employment and output by industry. (BM)
Descriptors: Economic Development, Employment Patterns, Employment Projections, Employment Statistics

Kutscher, Ronald E.; Mark, Jerome A. – Monthly Labor Review, 1983
Many service industries are capital intensive, and the range of expansion in output per hour is not significantly different from that found among goods-producing industries. (Author/SSH)
Descriptors: Capital, Economic Change, Economic Factors, Employment Patterns

Herman, Arthur S. – Monthly Labor Review, 1982
Although productivity growth slowed during 1976-81 for most of the industries surveyed, a majority of significant industries showed advances in output per employee hour in 1981. The growth in industry productivity was consistent with the gain in the nonfarm business sector of the economy, which grew 1.4 percent. (SSH)
Descriptors: Cost Indexes, Economic Change, Labor Economics, Labor Utilization

Mooney, Thomas J.; Tschetter, John H. – Monthly Labor Review, 1976
Revised Bureau of Labor Statistics projections, which reflect assumptions about unemployment, labor productivity, and government taxes and spending, provide information about long-term trends of industry output and employment. One projection made is that health services and computer-related industries will continue to be the leaders in job growth.…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Economic Factors, Economic Status, Employment Patterns

Duke, John; Brand, Horst – Monthly Labor Review, 1981
Productivity growth was slow during 1958-80, partly because of the industry's tendency to retain skilled workers during cyclical downturns; computers and other electronic equipment aided production, but diffusion of such innovations has been slow. (Author)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Economic Factors, Employment Patterns, Employment Projections

Capdevielle, Patricia; And Others – Monthly Labor Review, 1982
Productivity increased in 1981 in the United States, Japan, and European countries studied. Gains ranged from 2 to 4 percent in the US, Japan, France, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands, to 6 percent in England and Denmark, and more than 7 percent in Belgium. In Canada and Sweden, productivity remained essentially unchanged. (SSH)
Descriptors: Cost Indexes, Developed Nations, Economic Change, Labor Conditions