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Bednarzik, Robert W.; And Others – Monthly Labor Review, 1982
In 1981, the unemployment rate rose, propelled by cutbacks in housing, auto, and related industries; the employment-population ratio was at a four-year low. Most leading economic indicators were pointing toward further deterioration and industrial production was still heading downward. (Editor/CT)
Descriptors: Economic Climate, Employment Projections, Housing Industry, Labor Force
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Berman, Jay; Pfleeger, Janet – Monthly Labor Review, 1997
An analysis of the 1994-2005 Bureau of Labor Statistics employment projections can be used to identify industries that are projected to move differently with business cycles in the future than with those of the past, and can be used to identify the industries and occupations that are most prone to business cycle swings. (Author)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Employment Projections, Industry, Labor Needs
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Tschetter, John – Monthly Labor Review, 1984
Evaluates the projections of 1980 economic activity and industry output and employment. Discusses errors in employment projections (especially in underestimations of employment) and determines sources of errors. (SK)
Descriptors: Employment Projections, Employment Statistics, Error of Measurement, Industry
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O'Carroll, Lloyd T. – Monthly Labor Review, 1971
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Labor Needs, Machinery Industry, Skill Obsolescence
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Singleton, Christopher J. – Monthly Labor Review, 1990
Export-related industries accounted for almost half of the rebound in manufacturing employment after the decline of 1984-86. (Author)
Descriptors: Blue Collar Occupations, Employment Patterns, Exports, Labor Needs
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Gardner, Jennifer M. – Monthly Labor Review, 1993
The weak economy of the early 1990s increased the number of displaced workers. Although a disproportionately large share were in the goods-producing industries, displacements were much more widespread across industries than a decade earlier. (Author)
Descriptors: Dislocated Workers, Employment Patterns, Job Layoff, Manufacturing Industry
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Langdon, David S.; McMenamin, Terence M.; Krolik, Thomas J. – Monthly Labor Review, 2002
A weakening labor market in 2001 spread manufacturing's downturn into other sectors. Unemployment climbed from the historic lows reached during the recent economic expansion. (Contains 84 notes and references.) (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Income, Labor Market, Manufacturing Industry
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Bell, Donald R. – Monthly Labor Review, 1975
Of all private nonfarm workers, 65 percent were employed in 1972 in establishments offering pension plans, compared with 58 percent in 1968. (Author)
Descriptors: Industrial Personnel, Industry, Planning, Retirement
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Armknecht, Paul A., Jr. – Monthly Labor Review, 1974
This series, while an imperfect measure of unmet labor demand, held its own as an economic indicator before being discontinued. (Author)
Descriptors: Employment, Employment Statistics, Labor Market, Labor Needs
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Shank, Susan E. – Monthly Labor Review, 1986
In the first half of 1986, moderate job growth continued, but only in the service-producing sector and in construction; the level and rate of unemployment were about unchanged, as employment increases matched labor force expansion. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Construction Industry, Employment Statistics, Labor Market, Service Occupations
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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
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Gellner, Christopher G. – Monthly Labor Review, 1973
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Employment Patterns, Employment Statistics, Industry
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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
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Goodman, William C.; Ilg, Randy E. – Monthly Labor Review, 1997
Notes that during 1996, overall job gains were moderated by losses in nondurable goods manufacturing and federal employment, and that declining unemployment was tempered by persistent long-term joblessness. (Author)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Federal Government, Government Employees, Manufacturing Industry
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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
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