• About
    • About EPI
    • Events
    • Newsroom
    • Newsletter
    • Contact Us
    • Why Give to EPI
    • Donate
  • Areas of Research
    • Budget, Taxes, and Public Investment
    • Child Labor
    • Federal Policy Watch
    • Economic Growth
    • Program on Race, Ethnicity, and the Economy
    • Education
    • Health
    • Inequality and Poverty
    • Jobs and Unemployment
    • Minimum Wage
    • Immigration
    • Regulation
    • Retirement
    • Unions and Labor Standards
    • Trade and Globalization
    • Wages, Incomes, and Wealth
    • View all
  • Publications
  • Data Library
  • Resources
    • Federal Policy Watch →
      • How many federal workers live in your state?
    • Family Budget Calculator
    • Child care costs in the United States
    • Economic Indicators →
      • Productivity–Pay Gap
      • Minimum Wage Tracker
      • Wage Stagnation in 9 Charts
      • Nominal Wage Tracker
      • Low Wage Workforce Tracker
      • Company Wage Tracker
      • Jobs and Unemployment
      • State Jobs and Unemployment
      • State Unemployment by Race and Ethnicity
      • JOLTS
      • GDP
      • Income & Poverty
    • Anti-racist Policy Research
    • Immigrant workers + your state factsheets
    • Economic Analysis & Research Network →
      • EARNCon 2025
      • EARNCon Sponsorship
      • Rooted in Racism
    • U.S. workers’ rights preemption map
    • Tax & Spending Explorer
    • Multimedia
    • Projects →
      • State of Working America
      • Inequality.is
      • Building Worker Power
    • Social Media Toolkit
    • View all
  • Blog
  • Donate

Political science

  • Business power and the turn toward the local in employment standards policy and enforcement

    May 19, 2022 By Janice Fine and Hana Shepherd
  • Alt-labor’s turn toward politics and public policy to combat the exploitation of low-wage workers: Building power and ‘punching above their weight’

    November 4, 2021 By Daniel J. Galvin
  • Where are the employers?: American labor relations in comparative perspective

    October 1, 2021 By Kathleen Thelen
  • Explaining the erosion of private-sector unions: How corporate practices and legal changes have undercut the ability of workers to organize and bargain

    November 18, 2020 By Lawrence Mishel, Lynn Rhinehart, and Lane Windham
  • Power and politics in the U.S. workplace: What imbalances of workplace power mean for civic engagement—and democracy

    October 7, 2020 By Alexander Hertel-Fernandez

We envision an economy that is just and strong, sustainable, and equitable--where every job is good, every worker can join a union, and every family and community can thrive.

EPI is a leader in the movement for economic justice. We use the tools of economics to win policy change that advances power for workers, economic security for families, and racial and gender equity in our nation.

EPI's rigorous research and transformative ideas fortify worker organizing, build a shared understanding of how power and policy shape economic outcomes, and drive progressive policy change at every level of government.

1225 Eye St. NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20005
Phone: 202-775-8810 • epi@epi.org


© 2025 Economic Policy Institute • Privacy Policy

Projects
State of Working America Data Library

Accessible, up-to-date data on the living standards of workers in the United States.

Economic Analysis and Research Network • EARN

The state and local network of organizations improving workers' lives through research and advocacy.

Program on Race, Ethnicity, and the Economy • PREE

Exploring how race, ethnicity, and class intersect to affect economic outcomes in the United States.

Tax & Spending Explorer

How do taxes and spending work, and where do you fit in?

Why give to EPI | Donate

EIN 52-1368964


About EPI
Newsroom
Contact us

The Economic Policy Institute staff is unionized with the Nonprofit Professional Employees Union.