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Hecker, Daniel E. – Monthly Labor Review, 1995
Presents tables of data from the Current Population Survey showing a clear relationship between major field and earnings for college graduates of all ages and both sexes. Most liberal arts fields were below the median. Men had higher earnings in almost all fields, age groups, and degree levels. (SK)
Descriptors: College Graduates, Majors (Students), Occupations, Salaries
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Bowler, Mary – Monthly Labor Review, 1999
Over the past 20 years, women's real earnings rose whereas those of men declined. Even as the gender pay gap narrowed, earnings differences between white women and black and Hispanic women continued to grow. (Author)
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Minority Groups, Salaries
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Rytina, Nancy F. – Monthly Labor Review, 1982
This report presents 1981 annual average data on the number of men and women working full time in each occupation and on their usual weekly earnings. Results indicate that occupations in which women workers dominate tend to rank lower in terms of earnings; men dominate higher paid occupations. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Females, Males, Occupational Information
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Personick, Martin E. – Monthly Labor Review, 1984
The range-of-rate system (determining pay relationships among individual workers within the same job) is examined. Focus is on the width of company rate ranges--that is, the spread between minimum and maximum rates--and the relationship of actual salaries to points within the range. (CT)
Descriptors: Entry Workers, Managerial Occupations, Occupational Information, Salaries
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Rosenthal, Neal H. – Monthly Labor Review, 1985
This article focuses primarily on how changes in occupational structure affect the distribution of earnings of individuals. It also considers the contribution of changes to the distribution of earnings of individuals caused by changes in the distribution of earnings by occupation over the 1973-82 period. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Employment Opportunities, Employment Patterns, Middle Class
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Mellor, Earl F.; Stamas, George D. – Monthly Labor Review, 1982
Recent years of inflation and recession held real earnings of wage and salary workers below 1973 levels; the pay gap between Black and White full-time employees narrowed after 1967, but the wide earnings disparity by sex remains. (Author)
Descriptors: Blacks, Economic Factors, Educational Attainment, Females
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Henle, Peter; Ryscavage, Paul – Monthly Labor Review, 1980
In a study of data concerning distribution of earned income among men and women from 1958 to 1977, it appears that the trend toward greater inequality among men continued but slowed in recent years. The more unequal distribution for women remained stable, probably reflecting limited advances. (CT)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Statistics, Labor Market, Males
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Cohany, Sharon R. – Monthly Labor Review, 1992
Comparison of labor force activity of Vietnam-era veterans and nonveterans shows few differences in employment status. However, although earnings were similar overall, veterans outearned nonveterans at lower educational levels, and those who served outside the war zone earned significantly more than war-zone veterans and nonveterans. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Disabilities, Educational Attainment, Employment Patterns
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Brown, Gary D. – Monthly Labor Review, 1976
Results of a census-sample study (model appended) of earnings differentials between men and women in three types of employment (government, private, and self-employment) indicate a need for policies to: (1) alter practices of financial institutions and suppliers toward self-employed women and (2) insure job-advancement for others. (Author/AJ)
Descriptors: Census Figures, Employer Attitudes, Financial Support, Government Employees
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Sackley, Arthur – Monthly Labor Review, 1982
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, most wage series rose more slowly in 1981, with much of the slowdown in the fourth quarter; when adjusted for inflation, they showed declines, although the wage-price gap was narrower. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, Economic Factors, Inflation (Economics), Salaries
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Stamas, George D. – Monthly Labor Review, 1981
Factors contributing to the low average earnings of workers in the southern states include interregional differences in urbanization, and differences in the racial composition, training, and union status of the work force. (CT)
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Differences, Economic Factors, Job Training
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Winkler, Anne E. – Monthly Labor Review, 1998
As married women have become increasingly likely to work in recent decades, their contributions to family earnings have grown as well. In 20% to 25% of dual-earner couples, wives earn more than their husbands. These trends may have affected family decision making, giving some women more input into family financial and career decisions. (Author)
Descriptors: Decision Making, Dual Career Family, Family Income, Salaries
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Mellor, Earl F. – Monthly Labor Review, 1985
This report presents 1983 annual average weekly earnings of wage and salary workers (both men and women) who usually work full time (excluding the "incorporated self-employed") in more than 200 occupations, according to the classification system developed for the 1980 Census of Population. (Author)
Descriptors: Artists, Athletes, Clerical Occupations, Employed Women
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Shaw, Lois B.; Shapiro, David – Monthly Labor Review, 1987
When they were in their early twenties, women in the National Longitudinal Surveys' sample underestimated their future work involvement. Expectations for working at age 35 gradually increased. Plans for working were significant independent predictors of actual work behavior and planning to work yielded a significant wage advantage. (CH)
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Labor Force Nonparticipants, Long Range Planning
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Stamas, George D. – Monthly Labor Review, 1980
From 1978-79 incidence of long hours among full-time wage and salary workers dropped for the first time since the 1974-75 recession. Of those who worked long hours, about 43% received premium pay (time and one-half the regular wage for hours worked in excess of forty per week). Employers used overtime hours to cope with disequilibrium phenomena…
Descriptors: Adults, Blacks, Blue Collar Occupations, Career Education
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