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Shapiro, Isaac – 1989
Restoration of an adequate minimum wage remains a critical ingredient in efforts to provide income security for poor and minority workers. The experience of recent years indicates that work does not provide economic security for many poor, Black, and Hispanic workers. National and minority unemployment rates have dropped during the economic…
Descriptors: Blacks, Economic Research, Economic Status, Economically Disadvantaged
Page, Marianne E.; Spetz, Joanne; Millar, Jane – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2005
Although minimum wages are advocated as a policy that will help the poor, few studies have examined their effect on poor families. This paper uses variation in minimum wages across states and over time to estimate the impact of minimum wage legislation on welfare caseloads. We find that the elasticity of the welfare caseload with respect to the…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Labor Legislation, Minimum Wage, Welfare Services

Martin, Linda R.; Giannaros, Demetrios – Monthly Labor Review, 1990
Studies suggest negative employment consequences if the minimum wage is increased. This may not affect poverty among households headed by women because the unemployment rate does not seem to play a statistically significant role in determining the poverty rate for this cohort. (Author)
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Females, Heads of Households, Minimum Wage
Anyon, Jean; Greene, Kiersten – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2007
This article argues that, although No Child Left Behind (NCLB) is not presented as a jobs policy, the Act does function as a substitute for the creation of decently paying jobs for those who need them. Aimed particularly at the minority poor like its 1965 predecessor, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, NCLB acts as an anti-poverty program…
Descriptors: Minimum Wage, Low Income Groups, Federal Legislation, Poverty

Morris, Michael; Williamson, John B. – Social Policy, 1987
Society's preference for dependency reduction over poverty reduction in dealing with the lower classes stands in the way of greater anti-poverty impact of social policy. Discusses four approaches to poverty policy, their effectiveness, and the poverty assumptions they are based on. Examines why a workfare strategy could be effective. (PS)
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Government Role, Guaranteed Income, Minimum Wage
Wisconsin Univ., Madison. Center on Wisconsin Strategy. – 2003
Many of Wisconsin's working families face economic distress, living from paycheck to paycheck and being forced to choose between paying their rent or buying food for their children. Parents under stress often cannot support their children with time, energy or resources. In order to affirm the importance of children in the state, and to help build…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Economically Disadvantaged, Family Financial Resources, Family Needs
Connors, John H. – State Government News, 1987
The dramatic increase in poverty during the first half of the 1980s hit women and children the hardest. Regarding this fact, the following are discussed: (1) economic changes since 1960; (2) the extent of the problem; (3) reasons for the economic vulnerability of women and children; (4) curtailment of social services; and (5) probable future…
Descriptors: Black Family, Child Welfare, Divorce, Economically Disadvantaged
Smith, Michal – State Government News, 1987
Without an increase in five years, minimum wage workers, 60 percent of whom are women, have experienced a sharp decline in real earnings. Over seventeen million Americans fall outside the federal provision and rely on inadequate state standards. Overtime and tipping laws are discussed. Social costs of maintaining the "working poor" outweigh…
Descriptors: Comparable Worth, Economically Disadvantaged, Employed Women, Employment Practices
Mincy, Ronald B. – 1988
Most economists agree that the difficulties of targeting minimum wage increases to low-income families make such increases ineffective tools for reducing poverty. This paper provides estimates of the impact of minimum wage increases on the poverty gap and the number of poor families, and shows which factors are barriers to decreasing poverty…
Descriptors: Economic Change, Economic Factors, Economic Research, Economically Disadvantaged

Lave, Judith R. – Society, 1989
Written by one of three members of Institute of Medicine's Committee on Health Care for Homeless who did not sign "Health Care for the Homeless," controversial supplementary statement to Committee's report, "Homelessness, Health and Human Needs." Explains reasons for not signing and argues that health care problems of homeless…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Health Needs, Homeless People, Housing

Busby, Wayne; Busby, Fran – Journal of Children and Poverty, 1996
Documents the plight of children in poverty, examines the secondary effects of poverty upon the person and community, analyzes why the current subsidy approach has been ineffective, and seeks a holistic explanation for poverty. A universal, revenue-neutral approach to reducing poverty based on "supplementation" and…
Descriptors: Child Advocacy, Economic Impact, Economically Disadvantaged, Empowerment
National Commission on Working Women, Washington, DC. – 1988
This report examines the situation of the one-half of the nation's nine million working poor who are female. It begins by looking at just who the working poor are. Two areas of study are education levels and types of jobs. The discussion then shifts to minimum wage earners and their characteristics, the current status of the minimum wage, and the…
Descriptors: Adults, Advocacy, Economically Disadvantaged, Employed Women
Krajcer, Menachem; Johnson, Tammy – Applied Research Center, 2006
This Legislative Report Card assesses how California's governor and Legislature have handled bills it says affected racial inequities--or might have if they had been signed into law. The report examines an eclectic collection of bills that addressed the minimum wage, the creation of a single-payer health care system and other issues in education,…
Descriptors: Race, Legislators, Minimum Wage, Limited English Speaking
Waldron, Tom; Roberts, Brandon; Reamer, Andrew – Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2004
The United States of America is often called the "land of opportunity," a place where hard work and sacrifice lead to economic success. Across generations, countless families have been able to live out that promise. However, more than one out of four American working families now earn wages so low that they have difficulty surviving…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Low Income Groups, Public Policy, Job Skills

Gold, Steve; Kibria, Nazli – Asian and Pacific Migration Journal, 1993
Examines data from published sources and ethnographic studies that assess the economic situation of Vietnamese refugees in the United States. Evidence suggests that, rather than a success story, the economic status of many Vietnamese refugees is characterized by unstable, minimum-wage employment, welfare dependency, and participation in the…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Asian Americans, Economic Status, Economically Disadvantaged
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