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Worker displacement in 1999�00
Ryan Helwig
Economist,
Division of Labor Force Statistics, Bureau of Labor Statistics.
E-mail: Helwig.Ryan@bls.gov.
As the economic expansion of the 1990s neared its peak, both the incidence and likelihood of job loss remained low; many displaced workers found new jobs, but earnings losses persisted.
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Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey
Are
single mothers finding jobs without displacing other workers?�a href="/opub/mlr/2001/07/contents.htm">July
2001.
Worker
displacement in a strong labor market�a href="/opub/mlr/2001/06/contents.htm">June
2001.
Worker
displacement in the mid-1990's.�a href="/opub/mlr/1999/07/contents.htm">July
1999.
Race
and the shifting burden of job displacement: 1982�. � Sept.
1996.
Trade
and displacement in manufacturing.�a href="/opub/mlr/1995/04/contents.htm">Apr.
1995.
Worker
displacement: a decade of change.�a href="/opub/mlr/1995/04/contents.htm">Apr.
1995.
Recession
swells count of displaced workers.�a href="/opub/mlr/1993/06/contents.htm">June
1993.
Industrial
structure of job displacement, 1979-89.�a href="/opub/mlr/1992/09/contents.htm">Sept.
1992.
Job
displacement, 1979-86: how blacks fared relative to whites.�a href="/opub/mlr/1991/07/contents.htm">July
1991.
Worker displacement still common in the late 1980's.�a href="/opub/mlr/1991/05/contents.htm">May
1991.
Worker
displacement in a period of rapid job expansion: 1983-87.�a href="/opub/mlr/1990/05/contents.htm">May
1990.
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