issue Labor

Equitable Growth supports research and policy analysis on how inequalities in wages, bargaining power, and the evolving labor market affect workers’ economic security and opportunity as well as broad-based economic growth.

Photo credit: Bannafarsai_Stock/shutterstock.com

Too many workers have been left behind as the benefits of growth increasingly accrue to those at the top of the income and wealth distribution. Equitable Growth supports research to improve our understanding of what is driving these trends, who is affected, and what policies can boost wages for all workers, provide for safe and equitable workplaces, develop pathways for upward mobility, and encourage stronger economic growth and stability.

Featured Research

post

What is going on with wage growth in the United States?

Inequality & MobilityLabor
post

Strong unions push firms to reduce riskier debt, lowering risks of unemployment for U.S. workers

LaborInequality & Mobility
report

Industrial policies will be more effective at supporting good jobs and a stronger U.S. economy where there is institutional support for worker power

LaborInequality & Mobility
Executive action to spur equitable growth

Executive actions to strengthen unions and increase worker power in the United States

Labor
post

A primer on monopsony power: Its causes, consequences, and implications for U.S. workers and economic growth

Labor
TOPICS: 1
TOPICS: Monopsony
post

Paid sick time and paid family and medical leave support workers in different ways and are both good for the broader U.S. economy

FamiliesLabor
TOPICS: Health, Paid Leave

Explore Content in Labor1738

Reset
post

Looking Beyond the Latest U.S. Jobs Data

Labor
TOPICS: 1
TOPICS: Minimum Wage
post

The benefits of more information when applying to college

Labor
TOPICS: 1
TOPICS: Minimum Wage
post

Bolstering the bottom by indexing the minimum wage to the median wage

Labor
TOPICS: 1
TOPICS: Minimum Wage
post

What happens when firms can choose wages?

Labor
TOPICS: 1
TOPICS: Monopsony
post

Why has the U.S. labor force participation rate declined?

LaborTax & Macroeconomics
post

Understanding changes in movement on the U.S. job ladder

Labor
TOPICS: 1
TOPICS: Job Mobility
post

Waiting for healthy U.S. wage growth

Labor
TOPICS: Wage Stagnation
post

Job losses, recessions and the U.S. labor market moving forward

LaborTax & Macroeconomics
post

Bonuses, wages, and U.S. compensation growth

Labor
TOPICS: Wage Stagnation
post

Shifting through the implications of the Beveridge Curve

LaborTax & Macroeconomics
post

Would graduating more college students reduce wage inequality?

Labor
TOPICS: 1
TOPICS: Job Mobility
post

Weak wage growth continues apace

Labor
TOPICS: Wage Stagnation

Experts on the issue

Grantee

Anna Salomons

Utrecht University

Learn More
Grantee

Tanya Byker

Middlebury College

Learn More
Grantee

Kate Bronfenbrenner

Cornell University

Learn More
Grantee

Sari Pekkala Kerr

Wellesley College

Learn More
Grantee

Jesse Rothstein

University of California, Berkeley

Learn More
Connect with us!

Explore the Equitable Growth network of experts around the country and get answers to today's most pressing questions!

Get in Touch