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Nilsen, Diane M. – Monthly Labor Review, 1984
Examines changes in employment, unemployment, and hours of work in manufacturing, with particular focus on the five major metal-using and producing industries which are particularly sensitive to economic cycles. (SK)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Employment Patterns, Job Layoff, Manufacturing Industry
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Bell, Donald R. – Monthly Labor Review, 1973
Descriptors: Industrial Personnel, Manufacturing Industry, Organization Size (Groups), Personnel Policy
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Stinson, John F., Jr. – Monthly Labor Review, 1972
Employment and hours movements are compared with patterns in two preceding recessions. (Editor)
Descriptors: Economic Climate, Employment Level, Employment Patterns, Employment Statistics
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Greene, Richard – Monthly Labor Review, 1982
Summarizes the findings and methodology of some of the recent innovative labor market studies in the private sector. Emphasis is placed on the micro-data study of the job creation process at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Similar studies at the University of California at Berkeley and at the Brookings Institution are also summarized. (CT)
Descriptors: Employer Attitudes, Employment Patterns, Industry, Job Development
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Nardone, Thomas; And Others – Monthly Labor Review, 1993
In 1992, manufacturing continued to lose large numbers of jobs and other industries had small employment declines; only services and government added substantially to their employment but with weaker gains than in the 1980s. (Author)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Government Employees, Labor Market, Manufacturing Industry
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Goodman, William; And Others – Monthly Labor Review, 1993
The probability of losing one's job because of a recession is very different for women and men, but, in the last two recessions, gender differences were reduced. The major cause is the relative performance of industries that heavily employ women (such as services) versus those that heavily employ men (such as goods-producing). (JOW)
Descriptors: Females, Job Layoff, Males, Manufacturing Industry
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Root, Norman; Daley, Judy R. – Monthly Labor Review, 1980
Provides a comprehensive look at female work-related injuries and illnesses by occupation, industry, and specific characteristic of the injury. Most injury cases were accounted for by younger women employed in manufacturing industries. Women in traditionally male-dominated jobs suffer the same injuries with the same frequency as their male…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Females, Injuries, Males
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Andreassen, Arthur E.; And Others – Monthly Labor Review, 1994
Andreassen and Berman suggest that more investment in the nation's infrastructure would result in new jobs in construction-related industries, although the impact on total employment would not be large. Pfleeger and Wallace examine industry and occupational employment alternatives for the health care field. (JOW)
Descriptors: Construction Industry, Employment Opportunities, Employment Projections, Health Occupations
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Hecker, Daniel – Monthly Labor Review, 1999
High-technology employment, 14% of total employment, is projected to grow much faster than in the past due to employment gains in high-tech services and among suppliers to computer and electronic components manufacturers. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Demand Occupations, Employment Projections, Job Development
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Meisenheimer, Joseph R., II – Monthly Labor Review, 1998
Because average wages are higher in manufacturing than in services, some observers view employment shifts to services as shifts from "good" to "bad" jobs. However, a deeper assessment reveals that within each industry, especially in services, a range of job quality exists. (Author)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Manufacturing Industry, Quality of Working Life, Service Occupations
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Nelson, Daniel; And Others – Monthly Labor Review, 1987
This symposium includes the title article by Daniel Nelson and "Unions Need to Confront the Results of New Technology" (Dennis Chamot); "Technological Change and Unionization in the Service Sector" (Cynthia B. Costello); and "Globalization and the Worldwide Division of Labor" (Harley Shaiken). (SK)
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, Economic Progress, Futures (of Society), Manufacturing Industry
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Tschetter, John – Monthly Labor Review, 1987
Examines producer services industries and reviews possible explanations for the growth of this industrial group. Particular attention is paid to the unbundling hypothesis, which argues that industries are transfering activities performed in-house to producer service providers. The presented evidence discredits this as a major force behind the…
Descriptors: Consultation Programs, Economic Development, Employment Patterns, Industry
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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
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Black, Sandra E. – Monthly Labor Review, 1999
Evidence suggests that increased international trade in manufacturing and deregulation in the banking industry may have helped reduce discrimination in these industries. (Author)
Descriptors: Banking, Employed Women, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), International Trade
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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
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