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Kumar, Pradeep – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1972
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Labor Economics, Manufacturing Industry, Salary Wage Differentials
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Eaton, B. Curtis – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1972
Empirical analysis of 26 Canadian strikes finds strikes profitable, Industries
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Labor Economics, Manufacturing Industry, Salary Wage Differentials
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Walsh, William D. – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1977
Develops a theory to integrate the effects of three factors--the relative supply elasticities of skilled and unskilled labor, adjustments in skilled labor hiring standards, and the presence of fixed employment costs for skilled labor--on the response of skill differentials to demand variation. (Editor/LAS)
Descriptors: Employment Qualifications, Labor Economics, Labor Needs, Labor Supply
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Schoeplein, Robert N. – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1977
Shows that skill differential in manufacturing, when measured on a national level, has remained surprisingly stable over the 1952-73 period, in spite of its history of narrowing throughout the first half of the century and severe pressures of inflation since 1965. (Editor/LAS)
Descriptors: Economic Research, Labor Economics, Labor Needs, Labor Supply
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Gustman, Alan L.; Segal, Martin – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1974
This study focused on the influence exerted by market forces and by the economic and institutional characteristics of the building construction industry. The results indicate that shortrun fluctuations can be attributed to changes in the labor market which systematically affect bargaining positions and thence wage policies and the…
Descriptors: Building Trades, Business Cycles, Collective Bargaining, Construction Industry
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Orton, Eliot S. – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1976
This study examines the year-to-year movement in the wage differential between skilled and unskilled workers, 1907-72, using union contract rates in the construction industry. The author examines a number of hypotheses that have been suggested as explanation for changes in the skill differential. (Editor/HD)
Descriptors: Construction Industry, Illegal Immigrants, Job Skills, Mathematical Models