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RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences: The U.S. Labor Market During and After the Great Recession
by Arne L. Kalleberg
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Details:
bound: 240 pages
Publisher: Russell Sage Foundation; 1 edition (March 14, 2017)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0871547414
ISBN-13: 978-0871547415
Weight: 1.1 pounds
RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences: The U.S. Labor Market During and After the Great Recession Arne L. Kalleberg
The Great Depression was substantially larger, involving a decline of over 20 percent of GDP and a rise in unemployment rates of about twenty percentage points, to approximately 30 percentDisapproval of unions is likely to be magnified by the fact that so few people now belong to unionsWith the advantage of almost a decades passing since the last business cycle peak, the [End Page 13] papers in http://mentsarowalja.blogcu.com/365-luncheon-dishes-a-luncheon-dish-for-every-day-in-the-year/34062360 volume contribute to our understanding of core questions pertaining to the Great Recession and its aftermathIn addition, especially in the aftermath of the Great Recession, the importance of food stamps (the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP), the earned income tax credit (EITC), and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) increased (Moffitt 2012)Read More The shocks to wealth and living situation and stress may have had important consequences for familiesEffects on Labor Market Entrants and Youth Unemployment How young workers have fared during and after the Great Recession is another understudied question
Labor Market During and After the Great Recession: Continuities and Transformations ppAt the other end of the life cycle, older workers who become unemployed but who are unable to retire as a result of financial concerns may well lack the skills to adapt to the technological requirements of the new economyThe extent to whichand for what outcomesthe Great Recession was a transformative event are still unresolved issues2) NoIn addition, workers with substantial savings saw at least temporary declines in the value of their wealth as a result of lower stock prices, and this may have led to a postponement https://inlonagode.jimdo.com/2017/07/06/emerging-technologies-for-information-systems-computing-and-management-lecture-notes-in-electrical-engineering/ retirement among some workers
These movements are associated with further wage declinesi-iii, 1-231 FREE Noii-iv, 1-235 FREE NoWilliam TMilkman and Luce (in this volume) argue that employers hostility toward unions during the previous three decades, especially in the private sector, was much more consequential than the short-term effects of the Great Recession on the reduction of support for unionsEffects of Job Loss and Unemployment on Individuals Health and Well-Being Studies http://swrdo.xooit.fr/viewtopic.php?p=2205 by Jennie Brand (2015) and von Wachter (2015) find that there are short-run consequences of job loss on a range of physical and mental health outcomes, including increases in mortalityFor example, the strong rise in womens labor force participation in the 1980s masked a persistent decline http://stimilanarmen.blogcu.com/meal-planner-3a-weekly-meal-planner-with-grocery-list-28home-meal-planner-26amp-3b-food-journal-29-28volume-3-29/34062365 the employment rate of men during the 1970s and 1980s recessions; this counteracting channel was absent in the Great Recession, bringing out more clearly a pattern of declining labor force participation for men over a longer horizonResearchProgramsBehavioral EconomicsSmall Awards in Behavioral Economics Recent Awards Program History Behavioral Economics Roundtable Books Reports and Working Papers Completed Research Early Career Behavioral Economics Conference http://alfacpu.yolasite.com/resources/Advanced-Cloud-Computing-Platform-For-Genetic-Algorithm-Simulation.pdf Institute in Behavioral Economics Future of WorkRecent Awards Program History Visiting Scholars Books Reports and Working Papers Completed Research Race, Ethnicity, and ImmigrationRecent Awards Social InequalityRecent Awards Program History Visiting Scholars Books Reports and Working Papers Issue Brief: Social Mobility in the United States Completed Research Funding OpportunitiesBehavioral Economics Future of Work Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration Social Inequality The Affordable Care Act Integrating Biology and Social Science Knowledge (BioSS) Computational Social Science Small Grants in Behavioral Economics Immigration and Immigrant Integration Non-Standard Employment Co-funded ResearchProjects Funded with W.TRecession-induced declines in fertility have also been shown to lead to reductions in womens total fertility rate, mainly driven by an increase in the fraction of women remaining childless (Currie and Schwandt 2014)
i-iii, 1-249 FREE NoIn accordance with this view, the Great Recession was broad, and ultimately led to large employment declines in all sectors of the economy and among all demographic groupsWhile many economists have put emphasis on secular shifts involving long-term changes in methods of production, including a reduction in manual routine work (Acemoglu and Autor 2014), recent research suggests that part of these changes may have occurred during recent business cycle downturns (Jaimovich and Siu 2012)Levy, Ted Mouw, and Anthony Daniel Perez examine the role of regional mobility in the adjustment processFor men this was mainly due to marriage being associated with a higher household incomeUnions The Great Recession further damaged organized labor, continuing a declining trend in union density that began a half century ago that saw a decrease in the percentage of unionized U.S wage-earning and salaried members in the public and private sectors combined from 24 percent in 1973 (the union density in the private sector http://asucpolcepal.wapka.me/forum2_theme_112963700.xhtml?tema=206 24.2 percent) to 11.2 percent in 2012 (6.6 percent in the private sector)The few studies that estimate the effects of job loss or unemployment directly on consumption typically find sizable near-term declines in consumption expenditure but lack evidence http://scanpostverhapspo.simplesite.com/433964136/4932358/posting/google-analytics-complete-self-assessment-guide long-term consumption responses (see, for example, Gruber 1997; Stephens http://ricotdie.inube.com/blog/5825564/the-work-of-a-family-welfare-agency-in-investigations-for-selective-service-boards-where-deferment-is-requested-because-of-family-problems-a-thesis-classic-reprint-betty-birmingham-moorehead/ market during and after the Great Recessioni-iii, 1-132 FREE NoSome of these effects represent continuations of trends that started well before the onset of the Great Recession in 2007, some are consequences that tend to occur during all recessions (though they might have been more severe due to the greater depth and duration http://tispardfilsubsclem.blogcu.com/bourbon-the-rise-fall-and-rebirth-of-an-american-whiskey/34062366 the Great Recession), and some might conceivably be regarded as relatively unique to the http://wordrolo.blog.fc2.com/blog-entry-5.html Recession 07f867cfac
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