The State of Working America

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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The State of Working America

نام کتاب : The State of Working America
ویرایش : Twelfth Edition
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : وضعیت آمریکای کارگر
سری :
نویسندگان : , , ,
ناشر : Cornell University Press
سال نشر : 2013
تعداد صفحات : 520
ISBN (شابک) : 9780801466236
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 24 مگابایت



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فهرست مطالب :


Table of Contents\nDocumentation and methodology.\nChapter 1: Overview: Policy-driven inequality blocks living-standards growth for low- and middle-income Americans\n America’s vast middle class has suffered a ‘lost decade’ and faces the threat of another\n Income and wage inequality have risen sharply over the last three-and-a-half decades\n Rising inequality is the major cause of wage stagnation for workers and of the failure of low- and middle-income families to appropriately benefit from growth.\n Economic policies caused increased inequality of wages and incomes\n Claims that growing inequality has not hurt middle-income families are flawed..\n Growing income inequality has not been offset by increased mobility\n Inequalities persist by race and gender\n Economic history and policy as seen from below the top rungs of the wage and income ladder\n The Great Recession: Causes and consequences\n A very condensed macroeconomic history of the Great Recession and its aftermath\n Economic ‘lost decades’: Weak growth for most Americans’ wages and incomes before and likely after the Great Recession\n Weak labor demand at the heart of the lost decade\n Weak labor demand devastates key living standards\n Dim growth prospects forecast another lost decade\n Two key lessons from the lost decade\n Extraordinarily unequal growth before the lost decade: Rising inequality blocksincome and wage growth from 1979 to 2007\n Income inequality and stagnating living standards\n Wage inequality and the break between wages and productivity\n Strong income and wage growth in the atypical last half of the 1990s\n Economic mobility has neither caused nor cured the damage done by rising inequality\n Today’s private economy: Not performing for middle-income Americans\n Middle-income growth lags average income growth and historical income growth rates\n Social insurance programs, not private sources, account for the majority of middle-fifthincome growth\n Growing shares of income are dedicated to holding families harmless against rising medical costs\n Households have to work more to achieve income gains\n Assessing what the private economy is really delivering to middle-income Americans\n Today’s economy: Different outcomes by race and gender\n Many more than just two Americas\n Male and female America\n No one ‘American economy\n Conclusion: The struggling state of working America is policy-driven\n The policy good for everybody in the fractured U.S. economy: Ensuring rapid recovery to full employment\n Table and figure notes\nChapter 2: Income: Already a ‘lost decade’\n The basic contours of American incomes\n Family and household money income\n Median family income as a metric of economic performance\n A look at income by income fifths\n Median family income by race, ethnicity, and nativity\n The Great Recession and American incomes\n Impact by income group\n Impact by race and ethnicity\n Income losses projected for years to come\n Rising inequality of American incomes\n Family income inequality\n Unequal growth of comprehensive household incomes suggests diverging well-being\n Sharp rise in income inequality apparent in every major data source\n The limited impact of taxes and transfers relative to market income\n Factors behind the large rise in inequality of market incomes\n How much did middle-income living standards actually rise between 1979 and 2007?\n Measuring living standards at the middle\n Sources of income for the middle fifth\n Income growth for the middle fifth has been driven largely by elderly households’ pension and transfer income\n Adjusting income for the truer contribution of health care transfers\n Disproportionate growth of transfers directed toward elderly households\n The role of hours worked and educational upgrading in wage growth\n Little of the growth of middle incomes can be attributed to a well-functioning economy\n Conclusion\n Table and figure notes\nChapter 3: Mobility: Not offsetting growing inequality\n Intragenerational mobility\n Lifetime mobility against the backdrop of generational stagnation\n Family and individual mobility trends\n Factors associated with intragenerational mobility\n Intergenerational mobility\n Cross-country comparisons\n The impact of race, wealth, and education on mobility\n Race\n Wealth\n Education\n Income inequality and mobility\n Has the American Dream become more or less attainable over time?\n Conclusion\n Figure notes\nChapter 4: Wages: The top, and very top, outpace the rest\n Describing wage trends\n The decade of lost wage growth\n Contrasting work hours and hourly wage growth\n Contrasting compensation and wage growth\n Wages of production and nonsupervisory workers\n Wage trends by wage level\n Shifts in low-wage jobs\n Trends among very high earners fuel growing wage inequality\n Trends in benefit growth and inequality\n Dimensions of wage inequality\n Gaps between higher- and lower-wage workers\n Gaps between workers with different education and experience levels\n The gap between workers with comparable education and experience\n Rising education/wage differentials\n Young workers’ wages\n The growth of within-group wage inequality\n Wage inequality by race/ethnicity and gender\n Productivity and the compensation/productivity gap\n Factors driving wage inequality\n Unemployment\n The shift to low-paying industries\n Employer health care costs\n Trade and wages\n Immigration\n Unionization\n The decline in the real value of the minimum wage\n Executive and finance-sector pay\n Explaining wage inequality: Bringing the factors together\n Technology and skill mismatches\n What is the appeal of the technology story?\n Education gaps and wage inequality\n The slowdown in the growth of demand for college graduates\n Within-group wage inequality\n The labor market difficulties of college graduates\n Jobs of the future\n Conclusion\n Table and figure notes\nChapter 5: Jobs: A function of demand\n Job creation is a macroeconomic outcome\n Zero is not the baseline for job growth\n What are today’s jobs like?\n Industries\n Firm size\n Occupations\n Job quality\n Unemployment\n Unemployment and age\n Unemployment and race/ethnicity, gender, and education\n Unemployment rates of foreign- and native-born workers\n Unemployment insurance benefits\n Labor force participation: Structural and cyclical changes\n Beyond the unemployment rate: Other measures of labor market slack\n Employment-to-population ratio\n Underemployment\n Long-term unemployment\n Over-the-year unemployment\n Job-seekers ratio\n Voluntary quits\n Recovering from the Great Recession\n Comparing the Great Recession and its aftermath with earlier recessions and recoveries\n Job loss and gender in the Great Recession\n Unemployment in the aftermath of the Great Recession: Structural or cyclical?\n The consequences of job loss and unemployment for workers and their families\n Conclusion\n Table and figure notes\nChapter 6: Wealth: Unrelenting disparities\n Net worth\n The racial divide in net worth\n Assets\n Stocks\n Housing\n Retirement insecurity\n Liabilities\n Student loan debt\n Debt relative to disposable personal income\n Debt service\n Hardship\n Bankruptcy\n Wealth of U.S. citizens compared with citizens’ wealth in peer countries\n Conclusion\n Table and figure notes\nChapter 7: Poverty: The Great Recession adds injury to insult\n Poverty measurement\n Official poverty line\n Supplemental Poverty Measure\n Relative poverty\n The working poor\n Poverty-level wages\n Job quality\n Work hours\n Determinants of low incomes\n The macro economy and poverty\n The impact of economic, demographic, and education changes on poverty rates\n Resources for low-income Americans\n International comparisons\n Poverty and the earnings distribution\n Resource allocation\n Conclusion\n Table and figure notes\nAppendix A: CPS income measurement\nAppendix B : Wage measurement\nBibliography\nIndex\nAbout EPI\nAbout the authors




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