Full Citation
Title: Boosting the Earnings and Employment of Low-Skilled Workers in the United States: Making Work Pay and Removing Barriers to Employment and Social Mobility
Citation Type: Book, Section
Publication Year: 2008
ISBN: 9781435641037
ISSN:
DOI: 10.17848/9781435641037.ch7
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Abstract: The last few decades of the twentieth century witnessed fairly dramatic changes in the labor market outcomes and socioeconomic status of American workers at the bottom of the earnings distribution. Earnings of the least skilled adults either stagnated or fell. Moreover, labor force participation and employment have declined considerably, suggesting a reduction in demand for the labor of the least skilled and an accompanying withdrawal from the labor force on the part of many low-skilled workers unwilling to accept diminished wages. Certain economy-wide developments have affected the employment prospects of all low-skilled workers regardless of race or gender. For example, the well-documented changes in the earnings distribution beginning in the late 1970s have increased the relative returns to postsecondary schooling as well as the returns to experience (Katz and Autor 1999).1 Nonetheless, certain social and institutional developments are likely to have had disproportionate impacts on the labor market prospects of certain subgroups within the population of low-skilled adults. For example, the prison incarceration rate between the late 1970s and the present more than quadrupled. That has had a disproportionate impact on less-educated black men and has left in its wake . . .
Url: https://research.upjohn.org/up_bookchapters/7/
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Authors: Raphael, Steven
Editors: Bartik, Timothy J; Houseman, Susan N
Pages: 203-304
Volume Title: America's Challenge in the Global Economy
Publisher: Upjohn Institute
Publisher Location: Kalamazoo, MI
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Edition:
Data Collections: IPUMS USA, IPUMS CPS
Topics: Labor Force and Occupational Structure
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