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In “Moving the Needle: What Tight Labor Markets Do for the Poor,” authors Newman and Jacobs advocate letting tight labor markets stay that way.
The city of Camden was supposed to bring jobs from some of America’s biggest companies. So far, that’s mostly gone unfulfilled.
A quarter of U.S. workers now live in a place where local law requires job listings to include a salary range.
January’s outsized 517,000 payroll gain was well above expectations and sparked fears of more aggressive rate hikes by the Fed.
Employers added a higher-than-expected 311,000 jobs, while unemployment rose from 3.4% to 3.6%.
Many workers laid off from tech jobs are finding new ones fast.
The number of labor actions has increased, as has the number of workers involved.
The Biden administration’s reshoring efforts, aimed largely at cutting dependence on China, dismays allies who seek U.S. investment.
Russia’s invasion has displaced millions of people. Some are rebuilding their lives and businesses in other countries.
What does this mean for their anti-inflation strategy?