Monthly Labor Review: MLR, Volume 11The Bureau, 1993 |
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Halaman 8
... materials may permit their use throughout more of the year . For example , con- crete can now be poured in colder weather than it could be previously ; thus , in some areas of the country , pouring concrete is no longer a sea- sonal ...
... materials may permit their use throughout more of the year . For example , con- crete can now be poured in colder weather than it could be previously ; thus , in some areas of the country , pouring concrete is no longer a sea- sonal ...
Halaman 9
... materials , enabling production lines to continue to run , even when domestic raw materials are " out of season . " The apparel industry also showed a fairly large drop in seasonality . Average monthly seasonal employment in apparel in ...
... materials , enabling production lines to continue to run , even when domestic raw materials are " out of season . " The apparel industry also showed a fairly large drop in seasonality . Average monthly seasonal employment in apparel in ...
Halaman 21
... materials stores , furniture stores , and automotive dealers were the first retail segments to experience sustained job losses , all beginning in the first half of 1989. This weakness coincided with the sluggish construction and ...
... materials stores , furniture stores , and automotive dealers were the first retail segments to experience sustained job losses , all beginning in the first half of 1989. This weakness coincided with the sluggish construction and ...
Halaman 40
... materials and equipment used , and work processes . Not surpris- ingly , the profile of how injuries happened to maids and housemen differed from that for cooks in the hotel industry . The following tabulation illustrates this point by ...
... materials and equipment used , and work processes . Not surpris- ingly , the profile of how injuries happened to maids and housemen differed from that for cooks in the hotel industry . The following tabulation illustrates this point by ...
Halaman 47
... materials 3.0 2.5 8.5 5251 Hardware stores 1.6 2.6 1.1 -7.6 5311 Department stores . 2.5 3.1 2.2 5.3 5331 Variety stores -.3 - 2.7 1.1 -1.3 54 Food stores .. -.8 -.6 -.9 .2 5411 Grocery stores . -.8 -.3 -1.1 .1 546 Retail bakeries -.8 ...
... materials 3.0 2.5 8.5 5251 Hardware stores 1.6 2.6 1.1 -7.6 5311 Department stores . 2.5 3.1 2.2 5.3 5331 Variety stores -.3 - 2.7 1.1 -1.3 54 Food stores .. -.8 -.6 -.9 .2 5411 Grocery stores . -.8 -.3 -1.1 .1 546 Retail bakeries -.8 ...
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Annual average 1992 Apparel Average weekly benefits Blue-collar workers Bulletin Bureau of Labor Census classified coal commodities compensation per hour Consumer Price Index contract coverage Current Population Survey data seasonally adjusted decline durable economic employed employees Employment Cost Index employment growth equipment estimates Excluding sales occupations Fabricated metal fatalities Federal full-time Goods-producing Hispanic hourly household increase injury and illness interviewers jobseekers June labor force labor force participation Labor Statistics less food Lost workday major manufacturing measures ment million mining month Monthly Labor Review Multifactor productivity Netherlands Nondurables operators Output per hour part-time Percent change period persons ployment Producer Price Indexes programs projected Puerto Rican questionnaire recession reported retail trade revised sample sector Service-producing sources Sweden tion Total Transportation unem unemployed unemployment rate United Kingdom wage and salary weeks women workers