News release archive: Topic: Labor markets
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Labor market topics are: jobs, unemployment, unions, and specific industries.
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2008
JUNE 18 |
Reopened AF tanker discussions should weigh jobs impact
2006
JULY 12 | Union Rights for 8 Million at Stake (Issue Brief)
JULY 10 | Chicago Can Have Better Wages AND Low Prices (Viewpoint)
2005
AUGUST 5 | EPI NewsFlash: Overall job market
expands
Analysis by the Economic Policy Institute of
today’s BLS jobs report shows solid employment gains reaching most
industries, as employers appear to be shedding their cautious ways
and hiring to meet expanded demand. Today’s
Jobs Picture, by EPI economist Jared Bernstein, examines these
favorable trends, with the exception of manufacturing, where job
losses continue to accumulate. In today’s JobWatch,
EPI economist Sylvia Allegretto illustrates the lingering effects
on employment in IT-producing industries after the bubble burst in
mid-2000. Some IT-related occupations, such as those in
computer-related fields, have shown recent signs of improvement,
but IT employment is growing slower than overall payrolls.
JUNE 29 | EPI NewsFlash: Job Quality
Improving
After three and a half hears in which
lower-paying industries grew faster than higher-paying ones, the
quality of U.S. job growth by industry once again nosed into
positive territory during the first quarter of 2005. In today's
economic
snapshot, EPI economist Elise Gould tracks the pay diferential
between expanding and contracting industries since 1991.
JUNE 8 | EPI NewsFlash: CAFTA under NAFTA
cloud
Supporters of CAFTA argue that it will benefit the agricultural
sector, but just how likely are those benefits to materialize? In
today's economic
snapshot, EPI trade economist Robert Scott examines similar
predictions that were made before the passage of NAFTA, and shows
why the claims now being made about CAFTA should be taken with a
grain of salt.
JUNE 3 | EPI NewsFlash: Where the Jobs
Are
It took an unprecedented 50 months, but jobs in the private sector
have finally regained their pre-recession levels. But not all
industrial sectors are making a comeback. In today's JobWatch,
Economic Policy Institute economist Sylvia Allegretto charts which
sectors are hot and which are not. Get the full analysis on private
sector job growth on the JobWatch.org Web site.
2004
JULY 14 | EPI NewsFlash: Falling Corporate
Tax Revenues Push Deficits Higher
Proceeds from corporate
tax income are steadily eroding, and the federal budget is paying
the steep price in higher deficits. Read the EPI
Snapshot for a comparison of the trend in corporate income tax
revenue to profits and GDP.
JUNE 2 | EPI NewsFlash: IT Employment Slack
Despite Software Demand
Spending on information-technology (IT) software has exceeded its
2000 peak, but IT employment lags well below its peak level,
according to this week's Economic
Snapshot by EPI economist Josh Bivens. He describes how the
offshoring of software jobs overseas has possibly played a part in
the IT labor market slack.
MAY 12 | EPI NewsFlash: Growing Industries
Provide Less Health Coverage
Using health insurance coverage as the yardstick, the quality of
U.S. jobs in industries that are expanding is lower than in those
that are contracting, according to the Economic Policy Institute.
Read the Economic
Snapshot .
APRIL 29 | EPI NewsFlash: New Book Links FCC
Policies to Job Loss in Telecom Industry
Outdated rules in the Telecommunications Act of 1996 strangle the
established local wired phone companies and have contributed to the
loss of 380,000 jobs across the entire economy. Stephen Pociask
lays out the facts in A Failure to Communicate: Reforming Public
Policy in the Telecommunications Industry, to be released Tuesday,
May 4, 2004. READ the full
press release. ![]()
APRIL 8 | EPI NewsFlash:
Good Policy Could Halt Manufacturing Job Losses
See
Press Release. ![]()
MARCH 29 | EPI NewsFlash: U.S. rapidly
losing high-tech edge to China
A
Snapshot by senior economist Robert Scott shows that China is
sharply ramping up its high-tech exports while the U.S. trade
balance in such goods has declined from a $32.3 billion surplus in
1997 to a $27.4 billion deficit in 2003.
MARCH 24 | EPI NewsFlash: High Paying
Software Jobs Moving to India
Economists Lee Price and Josh Bivens find evidence that points to a
significant movement of U.S. software jobs to India. U.S. jobs in
software-producing industries declined by 128,000 between 2000 and
2004, while professional jobs in India's software export sector
rose by 150,000 from 1999 to 2003. For more details read the
Snapshot .
MARCH 16 | EPI NewsFlash: Low Taxes Don't
Add Up to State Economic Development
In the scramble to lure businesses and jobs to their state,
policymakers assume that low taxes and business tax incentives make
the best bait. A new study offers strong evidence that such
policies are neither the best nor the most cost-effective
strategies for attracting businesses and jobs. To read about
"Rethinking Growth Strategies: How State and Local Taxes and
Services Affect Economic Development" by economist Robert G. Lynch,
click
here. ![]()
MARCH 10 | EPI NewsFlash: Trade Deficits
Fuel Manufacturing's Decline
The U.S manufacturing industry ended 2003 with fewer workers than
at any time since 1958. Economist Josh Bivens examines the real
culprit behind falling production: rising trade deficits in
manufactured goods.
Snapshot .
MARCH 3 | EPI News
Flash: Hi-Tech Spikes, But Other Manufacturing Sectors
Lag
Increased investment has given a boom to high-tech
industries, with industrial production and capacity rising over the
past year. But other manufacturing industries are stagnating, with
March becoming the 19th straight month of year-on-year decline in
industrial capacity. In this EPI Snapshot, economist Josh Bivens
shows that most manufacturing industries are still left behind and
illustrates why a broader investment economic recovery is needed.
Snapshot
2003
SEPTEMBER 12 |
Policy Changes Needed To Revive Manufacturing
![]()
AUGUST
6 |
End of the Line For Amtrak?
![]()
JUNE 11 | EPI NewsFlash: Manufacturing Sector in Crisis
JUNE 4 |
Study Shows Amtrak Crucial to Economy, Environment & Homeland
Security ![]()
JUNE 4 |
News Roundtable:The Future and Impact of Amtrack ![]()
Listen to
roundtable (EPI Audio Archive)
JUNE 4 | Study Shows Amtrak Crucial to Economy, Environment & Homeland Security
JUNE 4 |
News Roundtable:The Future and Impact of Amtrack ![]()
JANUARY 22 | EPI SNAPSHOT: The White-Collar Blues
2002
AUGUST 2 |
Proposed merger raises concerns ![]()
2008
JULY 3 |
Job market declines, paychecks wither
JUNE 24 | Job
quality growing concern in euro countries
JUNE 18 |
Reopened AF tanker discussions should weigh jobs impact
2007
MARCH 28 | Immigration
Reform, Getting it Right, An Agenda for Shared Prosperity
Forum (
news release [PDF])
MARCH 21 | Immigration Reform, Getting It Right (Conference Call)
MARCH 15 | Getting Immigration Reform Right Briefing Paper released ( News release [PDF])
MARCH 7 | Inflation and Labor Costs
FEBRUARY 22 | Agenda for Shared Prosperity holds its second event on Capitol Hill ( News release [PDF])
FEBRUARY 21 | Slow growth in manufacturing is culprit in job loss
2006
AUGUST 10 | Immigration Bill Would Protect U.S. Workers (Policy Memo)
AUGUST 9 | Poverty Rates and Work for Single Mothers (Snapshot)
AUGUST 4 | Unemployment Rate Rises as Job Growth Slows (Jobs Picture)
JULY 12 | Union Rights for 8 Million at Stake (Issue Brief)
JULY 7 | Job Growth Slows Again, Indicating Trend (Jobs Picture)
JULY 7 | Black-White Income Gap Re-Widens (Snapshot)
JUNE 12 | 5 Economic Trouble Spots (Policy Memo)
JUNE 2 | Job Growth Disappoints — Again (Jobs Picture)
MAY 24 | College Grads Find Weak Labor Market (Snapshot)
MAY 15 | The Immigration Piece Bush May Miss (Viewpoint)
MAY 5 | Wage Growth is Bright Spot in Jobs Report (Jobs Picture)
MAY 4 | White House “Cherry-Picking” Economic Data (Snapshot)
APRIL 7 | Job Growth at Five (Jobs Picture)
APRIL 5 | 'Insourcing' Not Creating Jobs in U.S. Economy (Snapshot)
MARCH 14 | Does the Trade Deficit Cost Manufacturing Jobs? (Briefing Paper)
MARCH 10 | Good News for Jobs and Wages (Jobs Picture)
FEBRUARY 22 | A Shortage of Skilled Workers? Maybe Not... (Snapshot)
FEBRUARY 15 | The Rise of Immigrant Worker Centers (Book)
FEBRUARY 3 | Job Market Shows Clear Improvement (Jobs Picture)
JANUARY 27 | State of the Economy (Issue Brief and Snapshot)
JANUARY 6 | 2005 Job Growth Mediocre (Jobs Picture)
2005
DECEMBER 14 | Worker Centers for Immigrants Changing Workplace, Debate (Briefing Paper)
DECEMBER 2 | Job Growth Can't Match Past Recoveries (Jobs Picture)
NOVEMBER 30 | Trade Deficits Batter Manufacturing Jobs (Snapshot)
NOVEMBER 4 | Katrina Evacuees Hit Hard by Unemployment (Jobs Picture)
OCTOBER 12 | Study finds worker skills gap is unsubstantiated
OCTOBER 7 | Assessing Katrina's Impact on Jobs (Jobs Picture)
SEPTEMBER 2 | What Ails Wages? (Briefing Paper)
SEPTEMBER 2 | EPI NewsFlash: Moderate job growth, but unemployment rate down (Jobs Picture)
AUGUST 10 | EPI NewsFlash: China likely to
unravel CAFTA textile trade
Passage of the CAFTA trade
deal was predicated on promises that it would be good for textile
and apparel employment in the United States and Central America.
But in today’s Snapshot,
Economic Policy Institute researchers Robert Scott and David Ratner
show that the promise of more textile jobs is a pipe dream, given
the enormous surge in China’s textile exports to the U.S.
AUGUST 5 | EPI NewsFlash: Overall job market
expands
Analysis by the Economic Policy Institute of
today’s BLS jobs report shows solid employment gains reaching most
industries, as employers appear to be shedding their cautious ways
and hiring to meet expanded demand. Today’s
Jobs Picture, by EPI economist Jared Bernstein, examines these
favorable trends, with the exception of manufacturing, where job
losses continue to accumulate. In today’s JobWatch,
EPI economist Sylvia Allegretto illustrates the lingering effects
on employment in IT-producing industries after the bubble burst in
mid-2000. Some IT-related occupations, such as those in
computer-related fields, have shown recent signs of improvement,
but IT employment is growing slower than overall payrolls.
AUGUST 3 | EPI NewsFlash: Defense Jobs Take
Up Labor Market Slack
The economy has roughly a million
more jobs now than four years ago, despite the job losses in teh
private sector over the same period. Government spending has saved
the day by creating more than 2 million jobs over that time period.
In today's Snapshot,
EPI research director Lee Price estimates that the private sector
has 1.2 million fewer non-defense-related jobs than four years ago.
He explains that the 2.1 million jobs created by government
spending in the last four years has proved invaluable in the labor
market progress that has occurred. Perhaps more tellingly, the
report demonstrates the profound weakness of private sector job
creation for most of the last four years and the capacity of
government spending to offset some of that weakness.
AUGUST 2 | EPI NewsFlash: Serious Flaws
Found in Offshoring Reports
For the past two years, public concern has grown over a new word in
the American lexicon: offshoring. In this climate, three notable
research reports have weighed in with a more reassuring story that
finds offshoring to be, on balance, a net benefit for the nation.
However an analysis of those research findings, Truth and Consequences of
Offshoring, published today by the Economic Policy Institute,
reports serious flaws in those reassuring stories.
JULY 27 | Single mothers face steeper job
market climb
The employment rates of both married parents
and single mothers fell in the recession and jobless recovery. But
while the married parents' rate has begun to recover over the past
year, the rate for single mothers remains distressingly low -
signaling an uphill battle in the labor market for tehse
economically vulnerable families. In today's Snapshot,
EPI senior economist Jared Bernstein shows the steep decline in job
opportunities for single mothers, especially compared to their
married counterparts. The Snapshot looks at the share of employment
for both types of working parents at the first quarter of every
year from 2000-2005 to show how the employment rate for single
mothers remains depressed.
JULY 20 | EPI NewsFlash: Job Growth Poor
Compared to Previous Cycles
Although there were more payroll jobs in June of this year than in
June of last year, the overall growth rate for jobs in this
recovery lags behind the previous five post-World War II recoveries
of this length. Economic Policy Institute researchers Lee Price and
Sujan Vasavada illustrate this comparison in today's Snapshot.
JULY 8 | EPI NewsFlash: Jobs grow, but
full-time work lags
Analysis by the Economic Policy Institute of today’s BLS jobs
report looks at two areas in the labor market: analysis of this
month’s jobs report in
Jobs Picture, and the growth of full-time vs. part-time
employment at JobWatch.org.
JUNE 29 | EPI NewsFlash: Job Quality
Improving
After three and a half hears in which
lower-paying industries grew faster than higher-paying ones, the
quality of U.S. job growth by industry once again nosed into
positive territory during the first quarter of 2005. In today's
economic
snapshot, EPI economist Elise Gould tracks the pay diferential
between expanding and contracting industries since 1991.
JUNE 3 | EPI NewsFlash: Where the Jobs
Are
It took an unprecedented 50 months, but jobs in the private sector
have finally regained their pre-recession levels. But not all
industrial sectors are making a comeback. In today's JobWatch,
Economic Policy Institute economist Sylvia Allegretto charts which
sectors are hot and which are not. Get the full analysis on private
sector job growth on the JobWatch.org Web site.
JUNE 3 | EPI NewsFlash: Job Growth Well
Below Expectations
After April's strong showing, May's disappointing job growth
suggests that a convincingly strong labor market recovery has yet
to take hold. In today's
Jobs Picture, Economic Policy Institute senior economist Jared
Bernstein tracks the stop-and-go nature of monthly job growth to
give insightful analysis of the trends and patterns in this
atypical labor market.
JUNE 1 | EPIdeas: Fresh Perspectives on the
Economy
Book an Economic Policy Institute Expert for Your Talk Show. EPI’s
economists and policy experts have vast media experience and are
ready to explain how economic trends affect working people and
their families. For interviews or more information, please contact
EPI's communications department at (202) 775-8810 or news@epinet.org.
MAY 12 | Telecommunications Policy Erodes
Job Quality
The telecommunications regulations that were
meant to promote competition and progress have, over time, become
their greatest barrier. These unintended consequences are
documented in
Racing to the Bottom: How Antiquated Public Policy Is Destroying
the Best Jobs in Telecommunications,
a new book released today by the
Economic Policy Institute.
MAY 6 | EPI NewsFlash: Job growth beats
expectations
The Bureau of Labor Statistics released a
surprisingly upbeat report with 274,000 new payroll jobs added in
April. For a full analysis of jobs, unemployment, and wages from
today’s BLS report, see EPI economist Jared Bernstein’s
Job Picture.
MAY 6 | EPI NewsFlash: Young college grads
face weak labor market
Even with today’s report of the
creation of 274,000 new payroll jobs in April, young college
graduates are preparing to jump into a much weaker job market than
in 2000. Economic Policy Institute economist Elise Gould analyzes
today’s job market from the viewpoint of a young college graduate
on the JobWatch.org
website.
MAY 3 | EPI Alert: Resources for Mother’s
Day Reporting
As you write your stories themed to
Mother’s Day, it’s important to remember that as of 2003 (the 2004
data are not yet out) 71.1 percent of mothers of children 18 and
under were in the workforce. Here is a quick
list of relevant reports
and analyses that have been posted to
our website since last Mother’s Day.
APRIL 6 | EPI NewsFlash: African-Americans
Lose Traction In Labor Market
In this Snapshot,
senior economist Jared Bernstein shows that African-American
workers still struggle in the job market even though the jobless
recovery is solidly behind us. He compares current conditions and
those of the early 1990s recovery to gauge the workers'
fortunes.
APRIL 1 | EPI NewsFlash: Jobs Up, But Only
Half as Much as Expected
Economic Policy Institute senior economist Jared Bernstein measures
the strength of the economic recovery as indicated by job growth,
unemployment, and wages. In today's
Jobs Picture, Bernstein points out that while the recession
started exactly four years ago last month, private-sector payrolls
remain 389,000 below their pre-recession level, an historically
unprecedented example of weak employment growth.
FEBRUARY 4 | EPI NewsFlash: Longest stretch
to regain lost jobs
In the State of the Union Address
this week, the president boasted that 2.3 million new jobs were
created in 2004. But todays employment data show that growth
remains well behind the usual pace. In todays
Jobs Picture, Economic Policy Institute senior economist Jared
Bernstein compares job growth rates in previous recoveries and
finds that, on average, it has taken 21 months to surpass the prior
employment peak after a recession. In this case it took 46 months,
making this the longest slump of this type on record.
JANUARY 25 | EPI NewsFlash: Bush Tax Cuts
Fail States
With todays release of data on state-level jobs created last month,
it is now possible to assess the full impact of the Bush
Administrations Jobs and Growth tax cut on states. The plan failed
in 48 states and the District of Columbia. The administration fell
3.1 million jobs short of the 5.5 million jobs they projected would
be generated nationally over the last 18 months due to the tax cut.
JobWatch has monitored that
projection against the Bureau of Labor Statistics monthly national
and state-level job reports to clearly measure the effectiveness of
the tax cut.
JANUARY
12 | EPI NewsFlash: Trade Deficit Hurts Labor Market in All
States
New trade data released today by the
U.S. Census Bureau show that the overall U.S. trade deficit
continued to climb, hitting another all-time high of $60.3 billion.
China accounts for nearly one-quarter of the total U.S. trade
deficit, and cost the United States 1.5 million jobs since 1989
that it would have had if trade between the two nations had
remained better balanced. That deep trade deficit with China is the
focus of a
new release today by the Economic Policy Institute which
charts, state-by-state and industry-by-industry, its impact on the
labor market in every state and the District of Columbia.
JANUARY 7 | EPI NewsFlash: Jobs Growth-Year
in Review
December saw 157,000 new payroll jobs, closing
out the year with job growth in every month for the first time
since 1999. Economic Policy Institutes Jared Bernstein puts the
years job growth in historical perspective in todays
Jobs Picture.
JANUARY 7 | EPI NewsFlash: 3.1 Million Jobs
Short of Prediction
With todays release of the 157,000
payroll jobs created last month, it is now possible to assess that
the Bush administrations jobs and growth tax cut fell 3.1 million
jobs short of the 5.1 million jobs the administration projected
would be generated over the last 18 months. Visit JobWatch for EPIs full and final
analysis.
JANUARY 6 | EPI Advisory: Grading the Tax
Cut
Tomorrow morning the Economic Policy Institutes
JobWatch will tally the
final score on how the jobs and growth tax cut measured up to the
administrations own projections.
2004
DECEMBER 3 | EPI
NewsFlash: Fewer November Jobs Than Expected
November's gain of 112,000 payroll jobs proved to be the lowest
monthly jobs gain since July. Coupled with the fact that average
hours per week declined slightly and wage growth was flat, EPI's
JOBS PICTURE shows how last month's growth is insufficient to
erase the jobs deficit and existing labor slack.
DECEMBER 3 | EPI
NewsFlash: Job Growth Lower Than Expected
November's
payroll job growth of 112,000 fell below the 150,000 needed to keep
up with growth in the working age population. The latest wage gain
-- just $0.01 -- also fell far short of recent increases in
inflation. JobWatch explores
how weak the job market is looking.
NOVEMBER 5 | EPI NewsFlash: Optimism &
Caution as Jobs Rise
The nations payrolls expanded
sharply in October, up 337,000, according to todays report from the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, making this the strongest month for job
growth since last March. Economic Policy Institutes economist Jared
Bernstein cautions that one month does not a new trend make in
todays
Jobs Picture.
OCTOBER 27 | EPI NewsFlash: Female
Employment Rates Decrease, Reversing Trend
Economic
Policy Institute economist Sylvia Allegretto finds employment rates
(the ratio of employment to population) for females decreased by
1.7 percentage-points since the last business cycle peak in March
2001. At this point in every past cycle since 1948, female
employment rates have gone up. Allegretto illustrates this
substantial decrease and reversal of historic upward trends with
two graphs in todays economic Snapshot.
OCTOBER 25 | EPI NewsFlash: Two Jobs
Surveys, Same Sad Story
Countering the recent arguments
that the household survey provides a markedly prettier picture than
the payroll survey, the Economic Policy Institute has updated the
May 2004 analysis of the Cleveland Federal Reserve study,
Employment Surveys Are Telling the Same (Sad) Story. In todays
Snapshot,
EPI research director Lee Price finds that with the most recent
data, the story illustrated by the two surveys, one payroll and the
other household, remains sad.
OCTOBER 8 | EPI NewsFlash: Job Growth Weak
by Any Standard, Conf Call Today
Todays announcement of
the creation of 96,000 jobs in September falls far short of any
reasonable benchmark for evaluating employment growth, according to
the Economic Policy Institute. To judge economic performance such
as jobs, inflation or GDP, we must establish appropriate yardsticks
and benchmarks. Check EPIs JobWatch.org web site.
OCTOBER 8 | EPI Report Reveals Weakening
Growth
Analysis of todays jobs report by economist Jared Bernstein of the
Economic Policy Institute confirms that although the jobless
recovery is over, we have yet to reach a level of employment growth
that will absorb the slack remaining in the job market. In fact,
Septembers payroll gains of 96,000 appear to be part of a new,
diminished rate of job growth that began a few months ago and
stands in contrast to the stronger growth rate earlier in the year.
See
EPIs Jobs Picture for the full analysis of todays jobs
report.
SEPTEMBER 17 | EPI NewsFlash: Too-Slow Job
Growth Haunts States
Recent job growth is not enough to
raise most state job levels to where they were when the recession
started in March 2001, according to the Economic Policy Institutes
analysis of todays state-level BLS data. Find more on state jobs at
http://www.JobWatch.org
.
SEPTEMBER 3 | EPI NewsFlash: Jobs Growth
Remains Sluggish
JobWatch.org reports modest job growth
in August with the creation of 144,000 jobs, following the weak
growth reported for July (73,000 jobs) and June (96,000).
AUGUST 26 | EPIdeas
This Labor Day
weekend, the Economic Policy Institute will release its
authoritative book on today's economy and its impact on working
Americans and their families. The State of
Working America offers an in-depth look at who's winning,
who's losing, and where the trends are pointing in an economic
cycle that has been unusually hard on working people and their
wages. See EPIdeas
for Labor Day topics.
AUGUST 20 | EPI NewsFlash: States Reflect
Job Slowdown
Julys meager job growth nationally is
reflected in todays release of state-level jobs data from the
Bureau of Labor Statistics. Analysis from the Economic Policy
Institute shows 22 states lost jobs in July, twice as many states
as in June. A full analysis is available at JobWatch.org.
AUGUST 5 | EPI NewsFlash: Analysis of Jobs
Report Conf Call Friday, Noon
ADVISORY: Media Conference Call, Friday, August 6, At NOON
(EST)
ECONOMISTS TO ANALYZE JOBS REPORT, Focus on Displaced Tenured
Workers
Experts from the Economic Policy Institute will analyze tomorrows
job report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics in light of last
weeks Worker Displacement Survey which said that 2001 2003 held the
highest rate of worker displacement on record.
CLICK HERE to learn how to join the call.![]()
JULY 30 | EPI NewsFlash: GDP Slows, Past
Growth Revised Down
Todays GDP growth rate of 3 percent
does not produce enough fuel to create new jobs. In addition,
Economic Policy Institute analysis shows that downward
revisions to previous GDP growth data confirm that the economic
recovery is slightly weaker than originally reported.
JULY 22 | EPI NewsFlash: Jobs Forecast
Mixed
The latest BLS occupational job projections offer some good
and some not-so-good news, according to an analysis by the Economic
Policy Institute. In todays
Snapshot, economist Lawrence Mishel illustrates how changes in
the occupational composition of jobs in the next decade will
generate only slight modifications in demand for workers at
different education levels. This Snapshot
is a preview of the forthcoming book The State
of Working America 2004/2005 a comprehensive overview of the
U.S. labor market and living standards to be released around Labor
Day.
JULY 20 | EPI NewsFlash: Too-Slow Job Growth
Haunts States
Recent job growth is not enough to raise
most state job levels to where they were when the recession started
in March 2001, according to the Economic Policy Institutes analysis
of todays state-level BLS data. Find more on state jobs online at
JobWatch.
JULY 7 | EPI NewsFlash: Families Now Spend
More Time at Work
To refute the notion that Americans are working more hours per
year, some observers note that the average weekly work hours have
risen only slightly. But Economic Policy Institute senior economist
Jared Bernstein shows how a more accurate measure which reflects
that more family members are participating in the job market
reveals that average family work hours are, in fact, up 11 percent
since 1975.
In this week's EPI Snapshot,
Bernstein describes why the trend in average weekly hours doesn't
reveal the extent of hours families devote to work. By looking at
the average hours worked by all family members combined, Bernstein
finds that families work hours have increased substantially, a
trend that can erode the quality of family life, even as incomes
rise.
JULY 2 | EPI NewsFlash: Job Growth
Disappoints
The
Economic Policy Institute reports far slower job growth in June
than expected. The unemployment rate remained stuck at 5.6 percent,
as more workers flooded the job market competing for the new
jobs.
JULY 2 | EPI NewsFlash: Unemployment
Unchanged, Under-employment up
The Economic Policy
Institutes JobWatch reports that
although the economy has created over a million new jobs in the
last four months, it still has not delivered the punch needed to
lower the unemployment rate
JULY 1 | EPI NewsAlert: Analysis of
Tomorrows Job Numbers
Economists at the Economic Policy
Institute will offer analysis of employment data at http://www.jobwatch.org. Tomorrows
release of the June jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics
provides an opportunity to assess trends in unemployment and
various types of underemployment (discouraged workers and
involuntary part-time workers) since the start of the recession
(March 2001) and the official beginning of the recovery (November
2001).
JUNE 4 | EPI NewsFlash: Healthy Job Growth,
Unemployment Rate Unchanged
For the third month in a row, the jobs report from the Bureau of
Labor Statistics reports a strong gain. See details on the Economic
Policy Institutes JobWatch Web site.
JUNE 4 | EPI NewsFlash: Job Market Hits
"Sweet Spot"
The Economic Policy Institutes analysis of todays jobs report from
the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows 248,000 new jobs were added
last month. See the
Jobs Picture for details.
JUNE 2 | EPI NewsFlash: IT Employment Slack
Despite Software Demand
Spending on information-technology (IT) software has exceeded its
2000 peak, but IT employment lags well below its peak level,
according to this week's Economic
Snapshot by EPI economist Josh Bivens. He describes how the
offshoring of software jobs overseas has possibly played a part in
the IT labor market slack.
MAY 12 | EPI NewsFlash: Growing Industries
Provide Less Health Coverage
Using health insurance coverage as the yardstick, the quality of
U.S. jobs in industries that are expanding is lower than in those
that are contracting, according to the Economic Policy Institute.
Read the Economic
Snapshot.
MAY 6 | EPI Advisory: Economists to Analyze
Jobs Report
Media Conference Call Friday, May 7, At NOON (EST). Read the
advisory.![]()
APRIL 23 | EPI NewsFlash: Halfway Mark for
Jobs & Growth Tax Cut
The Presidents Council of Economic Advisors predicted 5.5 million
more jobs would be created by the "Jobs and Growth" tax cut by the
end of 2004. It is now at halfway through that 18 month period, but
the April 23rd release of state-level job growth data shows that
all states are still waiting for their share of jobs.The nation as
a whole and 35 states still have fewer jobs than when this
recession started. For more data on unemployment and job growth by
state, click on http://www.JobWatch.org.
APRIL 2 | EPI NewsFlash: Employment rose
sharply, labor market weakness continued in March
Despite a strong March showing of 308,000 added payroll jobs, signs
persist of continuing slack in the job market. Notably,
unemployment rose slightly, long-term unemployment reached its
highest level since 1983 (when overall unemployment was much higher
than today), and underemployment rose. For more details see the
Jobs Picture.
APR 2 | EPI NewsFlash: Unemployment Rises in
Midst of Job Growth
The jobs paradox continues with the
March 2004 jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics
reporting a whopping 308,000 new jobs, at the same time as the
unemployment rose from 5.6 to 5.7 percent. Check http://www.JobWatch.org for more on
the jobs report.
APRIL 1 | EPI Media Advisory:
Media Conference Call
Friday, April 2nd, At NOON
(EST)
MARCH 31 | EPI NewsFlash: Job Growth Lags in
49 States
The release of state-level job growth data by
the BLS shows 49 states failed to meet the Bush administration's
projections for job creation. For today's data on unemployment and
job growth by state click on click http://www.jobwatch.org after 1:00
pm EST today.
MARCH 29 | EPI NewsFlash: U.S. rapidly
losing high-tech edge to China
A
Snapshot by senior economist Robert Scott shows that China is
sharply ramping up its high-tech exports while the U.S. trade
balance in such goods has declined from a $32.3 billion surplus in
1997 to a $27.4 billion deficit in 2003.
MARCH 24 | EPI NewsFlash: High Paying
Software Jobs Moving to India
Economists Lee Price and Josh Bivens find evidence that points to a
significant movement of U.S. software jobs to India. U.S. jobs in
software-producing industries declined by 128,000 between 2000 and
2004, while professional jobs in India's software export sector
rose by 150,000 from 1999 to 2003. For more details read the
Snapshot.
MARCH 15 | EPI NewsFlash: Job Gap Now
Exceeds 7 Million
Job creation fell 7.1 million jobs behind the growth needed to keep
pace with the expanding working-age population between March 2001
and February 2004. See details and color graphic in this
Snapshot .
MARCH 10 | EPI NewsFlash: No High Achieving
States in the State Jobs Report
President Bush's administration's Jobs and Growth tax cut plan have
not been achieved as of January 2004. Nationally the shortfall was
almost 2 million jobs since July 2003, when the tax cut went into
effect. For the latest data on unemployment and job growth by state
click on http://www.JobWatch.org. Maps and
tables show comparisons of job creation and loss between
states.
MARCH 4 | EPI
NewsFlash: Today's Jobs Picture Weak
Unemployment remained at 5.6 percent in February, but large numbers
of people dropped out of the labor force, presumably due to the
lack of available jobs. The 65.9 percent labor participation rate
was the lowest since September 1988. For an analysis by senior
economist Jared Bernstein, click here:
Jobs Picture.
FEBRUARY 25 | EPI
NewsFlash: Household Survey Measure of Job Growth
Disappoints
Economist Elise Gould illustrates how the household survey, which
includes the self-employed, shows a staggeringly slow job recovery
from the recession in 2001. Click here for details and a color
graph in this economic
Snapshot from EPI
FEBRUARY 18
| EPI NewsFlash: White House Lowers
Expectations
The White House backed away from a earlier jobs growth prediction
imade by the President's Council of economic Advisers. A joint
analysis
by the Economic Policy Institute
and the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities examining the
significance of the White House reversal.
FEBRUARY 13
| EPI NewsFlash: Administration's Job
Projections Miss the Mark
The Council of Economic Advisers' new claim that in 2004 the
average number of jobs will be 2.6 million higher than in 2003 is
out of sync with labor market realities, according to three experts
from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and the Economic
Policy Institute. Click here
for the press release and the
detailed report.
FEBRUARY 6 | EPI
NewsFlash: Weak Recovery Indicated in Both Employment
Surveys
The Jobs Picture analysis reports that unemployment fell slightly
and payrolls expanded in January, according to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. A significant jobs deficit still persists. A second
survey, the household survey, paints a rosier picture. Economist
Jared Bernstein explains why the payroll survey is the most
accurate picture of job growth in the
JobsPicture.
JANUARY 21 | EPI SNAPSHOT: Jobs shift from higher to lower paying industries
JANUARY 21
|
Job Quality On the Decline, New Analysis Shows
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JANUARY 20
|
Media Conference Call On Job Quality - Wed Jan 21st 11 AM and 1 PM
EST
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JANUARY 9 | EPI Jobs Picture
JANUARY 7 |
EPI MEDIA ADVISORY: News Briefing Conference Call FRIDAY, Jan. 9,
NOON EST
Can Bush Meet His Own Benchmark for Job Creation?
(Advisory)
| Listen to this
conference (Audio Archive)
2003
DECEMBER 12 | Measuring employment since the recovery
DECEMBER 5 | EPI Jobs Picture
NOVEMBER 7 | EPI Jobs Picture
NOVEMBER 7 |
Labor Slump Worst Since Great Depression![]()
OCTOBER 21 |
Administration Reneges on Job Promise ![]()
OCTOBER 8 | EPI SNAPSHOT: Why the recovery is still jobless?
OCTOBER 3 | EPI Jobs Picture
OCTOBER 3 |
September Jobs Miss Administrations Target
![]()
OCTOBER 1 | EPI SNAPSHOT: Extended unemployment rises among working families
SEPTEMBER 5 | EPI Jobs Picture
SEPTEMBER 4 |
New Website Monitors Job Performance of 2003 Tax Cuts
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AUGUST 27 |
Labor Market Left Behind
![]()
AUGUST 27 | EPI SNAPSHOT:Weak Demand Constrains Job Growth
AUGUST 1 | EPI Jobs Picture
JULY
22 |
EPI NewsFlash:Reverse Outdated Dollar Policy & Gain Good
Jobs
![]()
JULY 3 | EPI Jobs Picture
JUNE 9 | Grading the Bush "Jobs and
Growth" Plan:
Senate Testimony Flyer
![]()
JUNE 6 | EPI Jobs Picture: Job losses hit historic level
JUNE 6 | EPI NewsFlash: Will Bush's Plan Keep His Promise On Jobs?
MAY 13 | EPI NewsFlash: Pomp and Joblessness
MAY 7 | EPI NewsFlash: Bush's Job Claims Fuzzy
MAY 7 | EPI SNAPSHOT : Bush's dubious job claims
MAY 2 | EPI Jobs Picture:Unemployment up again as labor market conditions continue to decline
JANUARY 28 | EPI NewsAlert: Bush Plan Fails Jobs Test
2002
NOVEMBER 13 | EPI SNAPSHOT: Job Losses Surpass 80s & 90s Recessions
OCTOBER 2 | EPI SNAPSHOT: Job Deficits Forgotten in Unemployment Picture
2007
MARCH 28 |
Recent Gains Only Went to Highest Incomes
FEBRUARY 28 | Latest
data show more want unions
2006
AUGUST 10 | Immigration Bill Would Protect U.S. Workers (Policy Memo)
JULY 12 | Union Rights for 8 Million at Stake (Issue Brief)
2003
AUGUST 27 |
Labor Day News Release
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AUGUST
27 |
Pre-Labor Day Conference Call
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