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Berkowitz, Monroe; Johnson, William G. – Journal of Human Resources, 1974
Analytic labor force participation models which exclude information on worker health care lack explanatory power. If costs of disability can be separated through better information into costs reducible through delivery of health care, and costs more appropriately dealt with through labor market policies, the models will be improved. (KP)
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Health, Health Programs, Health Services
Leibowitz, Lila – 1983
An interactive, biosocial model of early hominids presents evidence that physical sex differences are not the basis for the sexual division of labor as is commonly believed. Production (the deliberate collection and distribution of food) developed among early hominids as a prerequisite for survival. Although the population appears to have had…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Evolution, Females, Labor Force
Heneman, Herbert G., Jr.; Seltzer, George – 1968
Data were collected from 69 large employers and interviews were held with 25 of these for purposes of introducing the researchers to research in the problems of manpower planning and forecasting. Findings from this heuristic survey of employers included: (1) 72 percent forecast some of their manpower requirements, (2) 36 percent forecast external…
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Employment Projections, Feasibility Studies, Labor Economics
Flynn, Patricia M. – 1988
Changes in skill requirements, training needs, the industrial and occupational mix of employment, and the spatial location of jobs are 'natural' consequences of a dynamic economy. These changes, in turn, influence employers' hiring and staffing patterns, workers' career paths, and economic growth and development. However, the evolving nature of…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Employment, Futures (of Society), Human Resources
Pomer, Marshall I. – 1981
This study analyzes the mobility of workers initially employed in low-paid occupations who moved to moderately paid occupations, based on 18,347 observations of 1970 Census data, compared to 1965 data. The study relies on the concept of labor segment, which provides an antidote to the individualistic perspective. Two broad segments, a low-paid and…
Descriptors: Adults, Blacks, Employment Patterns, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
MacRae, C. Duncan; And Others – 1974
The report describes the construction, application, and theoretical implications of an econometric model depicting the effects of labor subsidies on the supply of workers in the U.S. Three papers deal with the following aspects of constructing the econometric model: (1) examination of equilibrium wages, employment, and earnings of primary and…
Descriptors: Economic Research, Federal Programs, Labor Economics, Labor Force
Edwards, Clark; De Pass, Rudolph – 1971
Several simulations of population, income, and employment in rural and urban America during 1970-2000 were made based on alternative assumptions. The assumptions entailed implementation of certain policies that might effect a more equal rural-urban balance by the year 2000, in addition to a continuation of current trends. If basic trends continue,…
Descriptors: Employment Opportunities, Employment Patterns, Income, Labor Force