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Crowther, Jim – Adults Learning, 2011
"Meeting the needs of the learner is at the heart of all our proposals", is the claim in the ministerial foreword to "Putting Learners at the Centre", the document in which recent pre-legislative proposals for reforming the post-16 education sector are set out by the Scottish Government. Such a grand claim warrants scepticism.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Guaranteed Income, Labor Market, Adult Learning
Kesselman, Jonathan Rhys – 1972
Static and dynamic incentive effects of the following fiscal transfer forms are examined: income subsidy (negative income tax), wage subsidy, categorical income subsidy (work requirement), and overtime wage subsidy. Budgetary costs, aggregate labor-market impacts, and welfare effects are analyzed. A program for categorically combining wage and…
Descriptors: Costs, Economic Research, Economics, Financial Policy
Kesselman, Jonathan – J Hum Resources, 1969
Descriptors: Economic Research, Employment Level, Guaranteed Income, Income
Gordon, Edmund W., Ed. – 1969
"Strategies for Closing the Poverty Gap" by Gertrude Goldberg and Carol Lopate, which makes up the contents of this issue of the IRCD Bulletin, critically reviews income maintenance schemes, social insurance and public assistance programs, family allowances, the negative income tax, and full employment proposals. Of these plans to end poverty the…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Employment, Financial Support, Guaranteed Income
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Henry, Charles P.; Gross, Bertram – Urban League Review, 1986
The concept of full employment must relate government policy to the following: (1) improved quality of life; (2) private-public relations; and (3) the data needed for accountable decision making. Seven elements are suggested which will lay the groundwork for change. Historical government action on full employment is reviewed. (PS)
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Educationally Disadvantaged, Employment, Employment Opportunities
Garfinkel, Irwin; Masters, Stanley – 1974
While static economic theory predicts that most income transfer programs will lead to reductions in the labor supply of program beneficiaries, the theory has nothing to say about the magnitude of such reductions. In order to predict the magnitude of such reductions, the labor supply schedule of potential beneficiaries must be known. In previous…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Economic Research, Employment Patterns, Guaranteed Income
Cashman, John R.; Mattson, Robert E. – 1974
The Vermont study details employer responses to a two-phase survey designed to gauge employer receptivity to the use of wage subsidies in the private sector. The "mail survey" obtained from a sample of 1,084 employers (of whom 71% responded) elicited responses to a limited number of questions, while the "face-to-face survey"…
Descriptors: Employees, Employer Attitudes, Employer Employee Relationship, Employers
DaVanzo, Julie; Greenberg, David H. – 1974
This paper is concerned with research issues that must be faced in assessing the potential subnational effects of proposed income maintenance programs. The paper is divided into discussions of four major tasks that must be performed by policy analysts. The first is simply to list program provisions that may have important subnational effects,…
Descriptors: Economic Research, Family Income, Federal Programs, Finance Reform
Smith, James P. – 1973
The standard one-period labor supply model that economists have used is in some ways an inadequate tool to evaluate a Family Assistance Plan (FAP). The principal difficulty is that an FAP will have important interperiod or life cycle effects. The pure life cycle model, an extension of the work of Becker and Ghez, is derived here without reference…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Economic Factors, Economic Research, Family Financial Resources
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Newitt, Jane – 1975
A decade's explosive growth in the scope, funding and complexity of national social policy has created serious problems in the United States. This first overview report notes that the Office of Economic Opportunity (now known as the Community Services Administration) has ceased to provide a focal point for national social policy. It was this state…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Demography, Employment, Federal Programs
Stein, Bruno – 1974
The study examines British public assistance (Supplementary Benefits) and other income maintenance programs for employables. These are viewed as one policy set to analyze their incentives and disincentives to see if the incentive structure is consonant with a goal of promoting work. Sanctions applied to recipients are also analyzed. Relatively…
Descriptors: Dependents, Disadvantaged, Economic Research, Employment Programs