This research program examines the latest dynamics, institutions, and trends shaping employment and earnings, with a focus on policies to achieve full employment and the tendency of modern market economies to fall short of the mark. A cornerstone of this program is research on the job guarantee—a policy that would offer a publicly funded job to all who are willing and able to work.
0 Related Publications
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Working Paper No. 224
January 01, 1998
The Diagnostic Imaging Equipment Industry
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Working Paper No. 220
December 01, 1997
Employment Policy, Community Development, and the Underclass
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Working Paper No. 219
December 01, 1997
Linking the Minimum Wage to Productivity
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Working Paper No. 218
December 01, 1997
Selective Use of Discretionary Public Employment and Economic Flexibility
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Working Paper No. 216
November 01, 1997
The Impact of Racial Segregation on the Education and Work Outcomes of Second-generation West Indians in New York City
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Working Paper No. 213
November 01, 1997
Government As Employer of Last Resort
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Working Paper No. 211
November 01, 1997
Income Distribution, Macroeconomic Analysis, and Barriers to Full Employment
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Working Paper No. 210
November 01, 1997
The Effects of Immigrants on African-American Earnings
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Public Policy Brief No. 36
October 09, 1997
Dangerous Metaphor: The Fiction of the Labor Market
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Public Policy Brief Highlight No. 36
October 04, 1997
Dangerous Metaphor: The Fiction of the Labor Market
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Public Policy Brief Highlight No. 33
September 04, 1997
Is There a Trade-Off between Unemployment and Inequality?
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Public Policy Brief No. 33
August 06, 1997
Is There a Trade-Off between Unemployment and Inequality?