What’s causing the decline in labor force participation?
The short answer, according to data from EPI’s forthcoming 12th edition of The State of Working America, is that around two-thirds of the drop in labor force participation since the start of the Great Recession is cyclical, while around one-third is structural.
Bad management, not the UAW, crippled the Big 3
Ross Eisenbrey explains why it’s wrong to blame the United Auto Workers for driving Chrysler, Ford, and General Motors into the ground while foreign competitors ate their lunch.
Grim labor market for young graduates
The weak labor market has been, and continues to be, particularly tough on young workers: At 16.4 percent, the March unemployment rate for those under 25 was twice as high as the national average.
The public-sector jobs crisis
Decisions by state and local governments to cut public-sector jobs have disproportionately affected women and African Americans, two groups which have historically been overrepresented in public-sector employment.
Latest Research
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May 24, 2012
Labor force participation: Cyclical versus structural changes since the start of the Great Recession
The labor force participation rate (the share of working-age people who either have a job or are jobless but actively seeking work) dropped by two percentage points between the beginning of the Great Recession in December 2007 and the end …
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May 22, 2012
Asian Americans continued to suffer the most from long-term unemployment in 2011
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May 18, 2012
Recovery continues, led by strong manufacturing growth
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May 17, 2012
The Ryan budget versus the Budget for All: Exacerbating versus alleviating our serious economic challenges
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May 8, 2012
The odds of finding a job are improving, but are still stacked against job seekers
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May 4, 2012
April job growth of 115,000 likely understates growth trend
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May 3, 2012
The Class of 2012: Labor market for young graduates remains grim
Commentary
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May 24, 2012
Blocking Labor Department wage rule condemns young Americans to unemployment
Most Americans would rightly scoff at the claim that landscaping companies can’t find workers here in the U.S. and have to go abroad to find them. Many of us mowed lawns, weeded gardens, trimmed hedges, planted flowers and raked leaves as kids, and we know that this is work that can be done by most teenagers and healthy adults.
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May 21, 2012
The Ryan Budget fails to effectively address economic challenges, unlike the Budget for All
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May 16, 2012
A bold step forward: Assessing the State Department’s new J-1 Summer Work Travel regulations
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April 30, 2012
Comparing the pay of Apple’s top executives to the pay of the workers making its products
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April 23, 2012
Don’t cut benefits to protect benefits: EPI Statement on Trustees Report
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April 20, 2012
Prospects for improved working conditions for Apple workers: Lessons from the EPI panel
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April 17, 2012
Get rid of teachers or encourage them to stay — what is best for our schools?
EPI in the news
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CBS News | May 24, 2012
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The Atlantic | May 24, 2012
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The Huffington Post | May 24, 2012
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CBS News | May 24, 2012
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Think Progress | May 24, 2012
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Think Progress | May 24, 2012
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Think Progress | May 17, 2012




