Offsets and the lack of a comprehensive U.S. policy: What do other countries know that we don’t?
By Owen E. Herrnstadt
April 17, 2008
April 17, 2008 | EPI Briefing Paper
#201Offsets and the lack of a comprehensive U.S. policy
What do other countries know that we don't?
by Owen E. Herrnstadt
This publication is available on the Agenda for Shared Prosperity web site
Sign Up to Stay Informed
Search EPI.org
RELATED PUBLICATIONS
- Minorities, less-educated workers see staggering rates of underemployment
- EPI launches Economy Track
- Is the financial crisis leading to a new global order?
- Sustaining workers’ bargaining power in an age of globalization
- Through China’s looking glass—Subsidies to the Chinese glass industry from 2004-08
- Climate Change Policy—Border Adjustment Key to U.S. Trade and Manufacturing Jobs
- Tracking the recovery: One in four households has suffered a layoff over the past year
- Trade agreement favors pharmaceutical companies over sick
- Long-term unemployment soars
- The trade deficit trap—How it got so big, why it persists, and what to do about it
- See more publications about: Trade and Global Integration

