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Dreessen, Erwin A. J. – 1972
This dissertation deals with the relationship between wages and employment in five industry classifications covering mullwork and furniture plants. Census and other data for 1958, 1963 and 1967 are used, as well as data for the three years combined. The data are on the state level. The relationship is estimated within a simultaneous equation…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Economic Research, Employment Patterns, Labor Economics
Rostker, Bernard Daniel – 1970
By developing the short-run policy implications of a structurally disaggregated labor market, this study attempts to show that fiscal and manpower policies are complementary means to achieve full employment. Using a constant elasticity of substitution production function, the study demonstrates mathematically that the smaller the residual…
Descriptors: Economic Research, Employment Level, Labor Economics, Labor Market

Gunderson, Morley – Journal of Human Resources, 1973
In explaining variation in each of the success measures, the personal characteristics of the trainee are generally not important; his labor market characteristics are important only for wage changes; and the company and training program characteristics are extremely important. (Author)
Descriptors: Dropouts, Educational Programs, Employers, Individual Characteristics

Bellas, Marcia L. – Journal of Higher Education, 1997
Examined the extent to which labor-market conditions and the sex-composition of academic disciplines influenced average disciplinary salaries, based on the average, full-time 1988-89 salaries of new assistant professors for 16 academic disciplines. Findings from both cross-sectional and dynamic models indicated that both labor-market conditions…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Departments, Higher Education, Intellectual Disciplines
Porterfield, Shirley – Rural Development Perspectives, 1990
The shift in employment from manufacturing to services in 1981-86 slowed the increase in average annual pay of U.S. nonagricultural workers, with greater impact in nonmetro than metro areas. However, the distribution of employment in high, middle, and low paying jobs changed little. (Author/SV)
Descriptors: Economic Change, Employment Patterns, Labor Market, Manufacturing Industry
Blum, Debra E. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1989
Increased use of merit pay is attributed to growing competition among institutions to attract and retain faculty, demands for accountability of faculty, and a reflection of a trend in private industry toward providing more financial incentives for employees. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Compensation (Remuneration), Competition, Higher Education
Reich, Robert B.; Judis, John B. – Training, 1994
U.S. Labor Secretary Reich argues that training for high-skill work is the key to high-paying jobs. The New Republic's contributing editor, John Judis, attributes wage decline to decline of unions and proposes a compromise between business and labor. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Educational Status Comparison, Job Skills, Labor Market

Woltjer, Geert B. – Journal of Economic Education, 2005
For many students macroeconomics is very abstract; it is difficult for them to imagine that the theories are fundamentally about the coordination of human decisions. The author developed a simulation game called Steer the Economy that creates the possibility for students to make the decisions of the firms that are implicit in macroeconomic models.…
Descriptors: Macroeconomics, Educational Games, Economics Education, Computer Simulation
Zedlewski, Sheila; Chaudry, Ajay; Simms, Margaret – Urban Institute (NJ1), 2008
During the 1990s, the federal government promised low-income families that work would pay. Parents moved into jobs in response to new welfare rules requiring work, tax credits and other work supports that boosted take-home pay. Unfortunately, the record shows that low-income families have not progressed much. Many do not bring home enough to cover…
Descriptors: Tax Credits, Federal Government, Welfare Recipients, Low Income Groups
North, David S. – 1978
As a followup to an earlier study, this report examines the numbers, motivations, characteristics, and labor market behavior of legal immigrants to the United States. The data used is from published and unpublished government statistics, a survey of 5,000 1970 immigrants, and interviews with 254 of the 1970 cohort. The first three chapters provide…
Descriptors: Cohort Analysis, Comparative Analysis, Demography, Employment Experience
Sicker, Martin – 2002
The prospective place of the aging worker in the employment environment of the 21st century is examined. The following are among the specific topics discussed: (1) the real world of work and retirement; (2) the changing employment environment; (3) the restructuring of business in the United States; (4) globalization and the economy; (5) downsizing…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Aging (Individuals), Corporations, Economic Change
S., Perryman – 2002
Part 1 identifies the far-reaching changes to higher education (HE) in Great Britain during the 1990s. It shows that HE has settled into a new status quo, with a market for new graduates in 2001-02. Findings indicate that around 37 percent of 18-year-olds take part in full-time, further, or higher education; the participation rate at age 19 is now…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Career Development, Career Education, College Graduates
Quinn, Joseph F. – 1977
Two issues currently before Congress may have significant effects on the labor market experiences of retirement age individuals. These issues are the abolition of the mandatory retirement age and the elimination of the Social Security program's earning test. Both of these changes, if they occur, can be expected to affect the retirement decisions…
Descriptors: Gerontology, Income, Labor Force, Labor Market

Chemical and Engineering News, 1975
The American Chemical Society (ACS) survey of the year 1975 reveals low unemployment among chemists but that salaries failed to keep pace with the boost in the consumer price index. It is also indicated that unemployment among chemists may continue to rise during the rest of 1975 and that women in the field at all work levels, at all degree…
Descriptors: Chemical Industry, Employment Projections, Employment Statistics, Labor Market
Dart, Gary R.; Shell, Elton E. – 1968
San Bernardino Valley College instituted a library technician training program in September 1967. During the 1967-68 year, certain deficiencies became apparent, namely, data on job opportunities in the area served by the college and on what qualifications the graduates of the program should have. In June 1968, a survey of the area (limited to one…
Descriptors: Employment Opportunities, Labor Market, Libraries, Library Technicians