[Accessibility Information]
Welcome Current Issue Index How to Subscribe Archives
Monthly Labor Review Online

Related BLS programs | Related articles

ABSTRACT

December 1997, Vol. 120, No. 12

Worker displacement in an expanding economy

Steven Hipple
Economist, Division of Labor Force Statistics, Office of Employment and Unemployment Statistics, Bureau of Labor Statistics


As the economy grew in the mid-1990s, job loss declined and the rate of reemployment rose. Job losses that did occur were more widely dispersed across industries and occupations than in earlier years. This article examines the recent experience of job loss and reemployment using data from the BLS surveys of displaced workers. The analysis focuses on workers who lost jobs they had held for at least 3 years, under the assumption that these long-tenured workers have developed a more-than-marginal attachment to their jobs.

ArrowRead excerpt   ArrowDownload full text in PDF (161K)


Related BLS programs
Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey

Related Monthly Labor Review articles
Measuring job security. June 1997.

Race and the shifting burden of job displacement: 1982–93. September 1996.

Trade and displacement in manufacturing. April 1995.

Worker displacement: a decade of change. April 1995.

Employer and occupational tenure: 1991 update. June 1993.

Recession swells count of displaced workers. June 1993.

Industrial structure of job displacement, 1979-89. September 1992.

Job displacement, 1979-86: how blacks fared relative to whites. July 1991.

Worker displacement still common in the late 1980's. May 1991.


Within Monthly Labor Review Online:
Welcome | Current Issue | Index | Subscribe | Archives

Exit Monthly Labor Review Online:
BLS Home | Publications & Research Papers