October 1998, Vol. 121, No. 10
Labor month in review
The
October Review
Consumers spent more in 1996
Job tenure edged down in 1998
New media news
The context they set for this initiative is almost more interesting. Over the past few years, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has rapidly adopted a series of improvements in everything from sampling procedures to methods for measuring hospital prices. In addition, the report hints at further advances in quality adjustment, improvement in the treatment of utility rebates and other technical pricing issues, and plans to enhance the Consumer Expenditure Survey that is the source of the market basket weights for the CPI.
In an economy that increasingly generates service-sector employment and professional/managerial jobs industries and occupations that are traditionally thought of as fixed-salary one could ask how putting in longer hours affects hourly rates of earnings. Daniel Hecker finds that the key to understanding this is the occupation: for some occupations, such as managerial, sales, production, and mechanical, workers with longer workweeks earned higher hourly rates. For others including computer specialists, engineers, and teachers the opposite held true.
Two research summaries and two book reviews round out the issue. Keith G. Keel analyzes two key trends in auto retailing: the growth of leasing as a finance tool, and the emergence of the used auto superstore, itself often is stocked with the cars returned at the end of their leases. Joel Cutcher Gershenfeld and his coauthors present the results of a Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service survey of the issues confronting collective bargaining today.
The largest increases were in expenditures for entertainment (13.8 percent), transportation (6.1 percent) and for food (4.3 percent). The transportation increase was driven by a 6.7-percent rise in consumer expenditures for vehicle purchases (specifically used cars and trucks), while increased spending on food away from home (7.1 percent) fed the rise in food expenditures. (For more information, see news release USDL 98-415, Consumer Expenditures in 1996.)
The median job tenure of wage and salary workers edged down to 3.6 years with the current employer in 1998 from 3.8 years in 1996. Among men, declines in tenure were widespread across most age groups. Among women, overall tenure changed little from 1996 to 1998.
Over a longer period, 1983 to 1998, job tenure of men had declined a total of 0.3 year despite an upward shift in the age of the work force. All other things being equal, this age shift should have been associated with an increase in tenure. However, median tenure for male workers declined within every age group over the 15-year period and offset the age effect. (For more information, see news release USDL 98-387, Employee Tenure in 1998.
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News releases discussed above are available at: http://www.bls.gov/bls/newsrels.htm
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