Grant Category
The Labor MarketHow does the labor market affect equitable growth? How does inequality in turn affect the labor market?
The labor market is one of the most important institutions determining economic growth and its distribution, as labor income is more than two-thirds of national income. Skill levels and the efficient matching of skills to jobs are key for economic growth. Yet the labor market is not a perfectly competitive market, but rather one that is regulated by a wide array of institutions that affect labor income and its distribution.
We need a better understanding of the two-way link between equitable growth and the labor market. How does the labor market affect equitable growth? How does inequality, in turn, affect the labor market?
- The effect of the labor market on equitable growth
- The effects of inequality on the labor market
- The effects of productivity on the labor market
Explore the Grants We've Awarded
COVID-19 Relief Funding and the Child Care Workforce
Grant Year: 2024
Grant Amount: $80,000
Grant Type: academic
The Distributional Effects of Firm Productivity Changes: Evidence from U.S. Linked Worker-Owner Data
Grant Year: 2024
Grant Amount: $30,000
Grant Type: academic
Skill and spatial mismatch in the energy transition
Grant Year: 2024
Grant Amount: $15,000
Grant Type: doctoral
Causes and Consequences of Incomplete Unemployment Insurance Take-Up
Grant Year: 2024
Grant Amount: $15,000
Grant Type: academic
Worker Led Lawsuits: The Effects of California’s Private Attorney Generals Act
Grant Year: 2024
Grant Amount: $15,000
Grant Type: doctoral
The Distributional Consequences of Private Equity
Grant Year: 2024
Grant Amount: $15,000
Grant Type: doctoral