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. 178November 01, 1996
The Collapse of Low-skill Wages
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Public Policy Brief No. 26July 08, 1996
Making Unemployment Insurance Work
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Working Paper No. 170June 11, 1996
Which Deficit?
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Working Paper No. 168June 09, 1996
Assimilation
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Working Paper No. 166June 01, 1996
The Minimum Wage and the Path towards a High Wage Economy
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Working Paper No. 154January 01, 1996
Unemployment, Inflation, and the Job Structure
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Working Paper No. 153December 01, 1995
Technology and the Demand for Skills
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Working Paper No. 151December 01, 1995
The Working Poor and Welfare Recipiency
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Book SeriesDecember 01, 1995
Income and Employment in Theory and Practice
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Public Policy Brief No. 19April 05, 1995
Cooperate to Compete
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Public Policy Brief No. 11March 03, 1994
A Path to Good Jobs?
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Public Policy Brief No. 10November 10, 1993
Job-lock: An Impediment to Labor Mobility?