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Modestino, Alicia Sasser – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2011
Over the past decade, policymakers and business leaders across New England have been concerned that the region's slower population growth and loss of residents to other parts of the country will lead to a shortage of skilled labor--particularly when the baby boom generation retires. Prior to the Great Recession, the concern was that an inadequate…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Postsecondary Education, Population Growth, Baby Boomers
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Reno, Virginia P.; Ekman, Lisa D. – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2012
Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) is an essential lifeline for millions of Americans. Without it, many families would be in deep financial distress. SSDI is insurance that workers pay for through premiums deducted from their pay. In return, workers gain the right to monthly benefits if a disabling condition ends their capacity to earn a…
Descriptors: Financial Problems, Independent Living, Insurance, Access to Health Care
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Helyer, Ruth; Lee, Dionne – Education & Training, 2012
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore the issues around a multiple generational workforce and more specifically, the challenges and benefits for education providers and employers. Design/methodology/approach: Reviewing research papers, analysing academic texts, interrogating market intelligence and contextualising case studies, the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Baby Boomers, Employment Patterns, Aging (Individuals)
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Twomey, John – Community College Journal, 2008
This article describes four factors that greatly affect the United States' labor market over the coming years. These are: (1) impending baby boomer retirements; (2) ongoing shifts in the country's demographic composition; (3) the greatly increased payoff on postsecondary education; and (4) the direct correlation between technological advances and…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Baby Boomers, Supply and Demand, Labor Market
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Flaim, Paul O. – Monthly Labor Review, 1990
The influx of baby boomers into the job market exerted considerable upward pressure on the unemployment rate during the 1960s and 1970s; the maturing of this large population group helped lower the rate in the 1980s and should do so again in the 1990s. (Author)
Descriptors: Baby Boomers, Labor Market, Tables (Data), Unemployment
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Simon-Rusinowitz, Lori; Wilson, Laura B.; Marks, Lori N.; Krach, Constance A.; Welch, Catherine – Generations, 1998
Interviews conducted in 1994 with policy experts and researchers and from focus groups of adults aged 40-48 regarding the future work and retirement needs of baby boomers found that many adults are anxious but unable to plan for a financially secure future. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Baby Boomers, Futures (of Society), Labor Market
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Doverspike, Dennis; Taylor, Mary Anne; Shultz, Kenneth S.; McKay, Patrick F. – Public Personnel Management, 2000
To assist targeted employee recruitment efforts toward specific subgroups of the population, principles for recruiting older workers, Generation Xers, and members of minority groups are presented. (Contains 47 notes and references.) (JOW)
Descriptors: Adults, Baby Boomers, Labor Market, Minority Groups
Emeagwali, N. Susan – Techniques: Connecting Education and Careers (J1), 2007
A 2005 MetLife Foundation/Civic Ventures New Face of Work Survey found that many baby boomers are eager to make career changes that can launch a new chapter in their working lives while they make social contribution. The survey found that 50 percent of Americans age 50 to 70 want jobs that contribute to the greater good. It found that more than 53…
Descriptors: Career Change, Retirement, Community Colleges, Baby Boomers
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Schrammel, Kurt – Monthly Labor Review, 1998
Contradictory to expectations of labor market analysts, young adults born during the "baby bust" (1965-1976) have thus far been less successful, in terms of earnings and other labor market measures, then their "baby boom" counterparts. (Author)
Descriptors: Baby Boomers, Educational Status Comparison, Employment Level, Labor Market