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.
Associated Scholars
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Pavlina R. TchernevaJames K. GalbraithDimitri B. PapadimitriouRania AntonopoulosFadhel Kaboub
217 Related Publications
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Working Paper No.237
01 May 1998
Speed of Technical Progress and Length of the Average Interjob Period
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Public Policy Brief No.39
01 May 1998
The Unmeasured Labor Force
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Policy Notes No.4
01 April 1998
Small Business and the New Welfare
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Working Paper No.228
01 March 1998
Education’s Hispanic Challenge
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Working Paper No.227
01 March 1998
The Japanese Financial Crisis, Corporate Governance, and Sustainable Prosperity
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Working Paper No.230
01 March 1998
The Romance of Assimilation?
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Working Paper No.229
01 March 1998
E Pluribus Unum
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Working Paper No.226
01 February 1998
The Political Economy of Corporate Governance in Germany
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Working Paper No.224
01 January 1998
The Diagnostic Imaging Equipment Industry
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Working Paper No.220
01 December 1997
Employment Policy, Community Development, and the Underclass
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Working Paper No.219
01 December 1997
Linking the Minimum Wage to Productivity
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Working Paper No.218
01 December 1997
Selective Use of Discretionary Public Employment and Economic Flexibility