Labor Schedule Stability
Topic Schedule Stability

Over the past several decades, employers have used new developments in scheduling software to implement “just-in-time” schedules, canceling or creating shifts with little notice in response to changes in product shipments, customer traffic, and even weather. These scheduling practices shift the risk of doing business away from firms and onto U.S. workers and their families. Equitable Growth is working to build the evidence base on how these scheduling practices—and the interventions designed to curb them—affect workers, their families, and the economy as a whole, and what measures can be put into place to provide schedule stability.

Featured work

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Automated and algorithmic management is already here, invisibly shaping job quality for U.S. workers

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New research explains how better-quality work schedules increase U.S. retail workers’ productivity and store profits

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New research shows unstable schedules do not offer more flexibility for U.S. workers

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Factsheet: Six frequently asked questions about schedule quality and Fair Workweek laws across the United States

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Unboxing scheduling practices for U.S. warehouse workers

FamiliesInequality & MobilityLabor
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How U.S. workers’ just-in-time schedules perpetuate racial and ethnic inequality

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Explore Content in Schedule Stability83

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Taking a look at unpredictable schedules

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Working by the hour: The economic consequences of unpredictable scheduling practices

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Schedule stability study

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Working mothers with infants and toddlers and the importance of family economic security

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A look at overwork in three charts

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The new overtime rule is “good economics and good business”

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Overworked America

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Garnering economic security is complicated for young families

LaborInequality & MobilityFamilies
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Schedule stability for hourly workers

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Schedule stability for hourly workers – Phase I of II

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Home economics

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Give working women their due for caregiving in economic policy debates

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