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Bingham, Barbara J. – Monthly Labor Review, 1979
Labor requirements dropped about 20 percent during a nine-year period, partially because of labor-saving devices such as modular and prefabricated units. During the same period, the cost of building college housing increased 74 percent. (Editor)
Descriptors: College Housing, Construction Costs, Construction Industry, Construction Needs
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Schwenk, Albert E. – Monthly Labor Review, 1974
Descriptors: Labor Market, Machinery Industry, Occupational Surveys, Research
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Nordlund, Willis J.; Mumford, John – Monthly Labor Review, 1978
Estimates from an interagency labor-demand model of energy-related employment in the next few years indicate that coal mining and power plant construction will provide most of the new jobs. (MF)
Descriptors: Construction (Process), Employment Potential, Employment Projections, Industry
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McConnell, Sheila; And Others – Monthly Labor Review, 1996
Includes "Role of Computers in Reshaping the Work Force" (McConnell); "Semiconductors" (Moris); "Computer Manufacturing" (Warnke); "Commercial Banking Transformed by Computer Technology" (Morisi); "Software, Engineering Industries: Threatened by Technological Change?" (Goodman); "Job Creation…
Descriptors: Banking, Computers, Employment Patterns, Job Development
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Field, Charles; Keller, Richard L. – Monthly Labor Review, 1976
Findings from municipal government wage surveys conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics are presented. Pay comparisons tend to show city clerical workers earning more, and skilled maintenance workers less, than their industry and Federal counterparts. Among 24 cities, no consistent pay leader emerged for 19 occupations studied. (Editor/TA)
Descriptors: City Government, Clerical Occupations, Federal Government, Government Employees
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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
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Ehrenhalt, Samuel M. – Monthly Labor Review, 1993
Analysis of industrial and demographic dynamics of New York City at once mirrors and anticipates events in other parts of the nation. Key factors are the sharp loss of manufacturing jobs, the rise in knowledge-based jobs, and the increased role of women and minorities in the labor force. (Author)
Descriptors: Economic Change, Employment Patterns, Females, Labor Force
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Armknecht ,Paul A.; Early, John F. – Monthly Labor Review, 1972
Rate of voluntary separations in manufacturing is a good economic indicator and a measure of workers' attitudes toward the economy. (MF)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Employment Patterns, Hypothesis Testing, Labor Economics
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Weinberg, Arthur S. – Monthly Labor Review, 1975
Descriptors: Assembly (Manufacturing), Case Studies, Foreign Countries, Industry
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Root, Norman; Hoefer, Michael – Monthly Labor Review, 1979
Summarizes data on work experience and work injuries available to date from the Bureau of Labor Statistics' new Supplementary Data System. Tables show work injuries and illnesses by length of service, industry, occupation, sex, and age. Inexperience (first year) and youth of injured workers were found to be highly correlated. (MF)
Descriptors: Accidents, Cohort Analysis, Correlation, Employment Statistics
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Hipple, Steven – Monthly Labor Review, 1998
Although the incidence of contingent work--jobs that are structured to be short term or temporary--declined between 1995 and 1997, it continues to be more common among women, youth, students, part-time workers, and in the construction and services industries. Contingent workers are also found in both high- and low-skilled occupations. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Construction Industry, Employment Patterns, Females, Part Time Employment
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Urquhart, Michael – Monthly Labor Review, 1984
The decline in manufacturing employment associated with the recent recession, coupled with the continued growth of services, has renewed interest in the distribution of employment among the three major sectors: agriculture, goods-producing, and service-producing industries. (Author/SSH)
Descriptors: Agricultural Occupations, Blue Collar Occupations, Demand Occupations, Economic Development
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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
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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
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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
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