About 17 percent of American workers have variable schedules, according to the Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank in Washington, D.C. Flexible scheduling is prevalent in sectors ranging from agriculture to restaurants, retail and transportation. Companies can save 10 to 30 percent by matching labor with demand, says Steve O’Brian, vice president of marketing at Shiftboard, a Seattle-based company that makes scheduling software used by employers including United Airlines, Medline and the Chicago International Film Festival.
Crain’s Chicago Business
June 24, 2019
As for Jackson, that paragon of rugged frontier parity? Well, according to the Economic Policy Institute, the winter playground for the rich is the single most economically unequal metropolitan area in America. And, alas, there is no radical democratic experiment afoot to clean that up anytime soon.
Ozy
June 24, 2019
Good luck meeting a family’s food, rent, childcare, medical, and car payment (car ownership is often required in a nation that lacks adequate public transportation) costs on those kinds of returns on labor power. The Economic Policy Institute’s rigorously calculated no-frills Basic Family Budget for a Family of two parents and two children in the relatively low-cost town of Rockford, Illinois is $80, 280. At $12 an hour with both parents working, mom and dad would have to work more than three full-time jobs between them to get by.
Counterpunch
June 24, 2019
Young Americans, meanwhile, are finding it more difficult to afford post-secondary education because their families do not have savings or credit, according to the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute.
Houston Chronicle
June 24, 2019
Ostensibly, the increase in visas for high-skilled computer workers is a needed response to the critical shortage of such workers here—a notion that has been repeatedly dismissed, including in a recent report from the Obama-aligned Economic Policy Institute, which found that the country is producing 50 percent more IT professionals each year than are being employed in the field. The real appeal of the H1B visas for “guest workers”—who already take between a third and half of all new IT jobs in the States—is that they are usually paid less than their pricy American counterparts, and are less likely to jump ship since they need to remain employed to stay in the country. Facebook’s lobbyists, reports the Washington Post, have pressed lawmakers to remove a requirement from the bill that companies make a “good faith” effort to hire Americans first.
New Geography
June 24, 2019
A new paper by the Economic Policy Institute says the impact of America’s teacher shortage isn’t being shared equally along socioeconomic lines. EPI Economist Emma García and EPI research associate Elaine Weiss call the conditions in the teacher labor market a ‘perfect storm.’
Global News
June 24, 2019
Even when benefits are thrown in, America’s teachers earned 13% less in 2018 than private-sector workers with similar levels of education, according to the Economic Policy Institute. The nonprofit think tank, which receives funding from labor unions, examined decades of federal data.
Abilene Reporter News
June 24, 2019
Lawrence Mishel is a distinguished fellow at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C. He crunched data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Employer Costs for Employee Compensation.
MultiBriefs: Exclusive
June 24, 2019
In 2017, the average weekly wage in McLean County actually fell slightly, even as wages rose 2-3% statewide and nationwide. (The Economic Policy Institute pegs the ideal annual growth target for nominal wages at 3.5% to 4%.) Doherty said local wages were dragged down most by the Financial Activities sector, aka State Farm.
WGLT.org
June 24, 2019
The Economic Policy Institute has found that workers’ bonuses have declined 22 percent since 2017. Using Bureau of Labor Statistics data, the EPI found that wages were equal to just .72 cents per hour. This compares with .88 cents in 2017 and .90 cents in early 2018.
OpsLens
June 24, 2019