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The job outlook through 1995:industry output and employment
job outlook industry output 1995 employment
2009/6/4
Recovery is expected in construction and durable goods, but services will continue to lead job growth; several heavy industries will not reach past peaks because changing markets and technologies will...
Economic outlook through 1995:industry output and employment
Economic outlook industry output 1995 employment
2009/6/4
Alternative monetary and fiscal assumptions suggest quite different trends in GNP and employment through 1995; in all versions, growth tapers after 1988, reflecting slower rates of population and labo...
A second look at industry output and employment trends to 1995
second look employment trends industry output
2009/5/20
In new BLS projections, the shift of employment from manufacturing to services in coming years is more pronounced, but manufacturing output continues to be an important factor in GNP growth.
Industry output and employment:a slower trend for the nineties
Industry output service-producing sector retail trade
2009/5/12
Of the 18 million new jobs expected by 2000, the service-producing sector will dominate, with about half added to retail trade, health services, and business services. This article analyzes the break...
Projections show services providing more than half of new job growth. In goods production, construction adds jobs, while manufacturing employment declines. This article focuses on industry output and ...
Industry output and employment projections to 2008
Industry output new jobs employment growth
2009/4/15
The services and retail trade industry divisions will account for nearly three-fourths of all new jobs from 1998–2008, a continuation of the 1988–98 pattern of employment growth.
Industry output and employment projections to 2010
Industry output employment projections 2010
2009/4/3
U.S. employment to 2010 is expected to rise, although not as quickly as in the 1990s; nonfarm wage and salary workers should account for most of the new jobs