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.

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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

report

How union contracts are protecting U.S. workers from automated management and surveillance in the workplace

Labor
report

Lessons from past trade adjustment policies to support displaced workers in the era of artificial intelligence

LaborInequality & Mobility
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Expanding eligibility for Unemployment Insurance helps low-income U.S. workers find better jobs

Labor
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How artificial intelligence uncouples hard work from fair wages through ‘surveillance pay’ practices—and how to fix it

Labor
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Adoption of generative AI will have different effects across jobs in the U.S. logistics workforce

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

Labor
TOPICS: 1
TOPICS: Monopsony

Explore Content in Labor1964

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working paper

Minimum wages and firm value

Labor
TOPICS: 1
TOPICS: Minimum Wage
working paper

Just deserts? Earnings inequality and bargaining power in the U.S. economy

LaborInequality & Mobility
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Geographic mismatch might not be a big deal for U.S. unemployment

Inequality & MobilityLabor
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All work and no pay for many women around the globe

FamiliesLabor
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Underemployment for recent U.S. college graduates

Labor
TOPICS: 1
TOPICS: Job Mobility
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Declining U.S. labor mobility is about more than geography

Inequality & MobilityLabor
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Unemployment and models of U.S. consumption

Labor
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Are unpredictable schedules harming U.S. workers’ health?

FamiliesLabor
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How intensely are U.S. employers looking for workers?

Labor
working paper

Historical state and sub-state minimum wage data

Labor
TOPICS: 1
TOPICS: Minimum Wage
working paper

Nothing left to lose? Changes experienced by Detroit low- and moderate-income households during the Great Recession

FamiliesLabor
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Taking a look at unpredictable schedules

Labor

Experts on the issue

Grantee

Joanna Venator

Boston College

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Guest Author

John Schmitt

Economic Policy Institute

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Grantee

Johannes Schmieder

Boston University

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Grantee

Sydnee Caldwell

University of California, Berkeley

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Grantee

Kanika Arora

University of Iowa

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