Michael Perelman said on 10/29/00 7:28 P
Martin, exactly. They line up for the few good jobs. The majority will not
succeed and will become unemployed.
I'm sorry if I interrupted a point you were trying to turn into a thread.
I read that they would join the queues of the unemployed and not
Concei‡ao, Pedro, Pedro Ferreira, and James K. Galbraith. 1999.
"Inequality and Unemployment in Europe: The American Cure." LBJ School
of Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin, UTIP Working Paper
Number 11
Michael Perelman said on 10/29/00 6:43 P
Regions with low average incomes are marked by the presence of large
numbers of relatively impoverished people in low productivity
occupations, and thus relatively high inequality across occupations,
industries, and sectors. Many such people seek any
Martin, exactly. They line up for the few good jobs. The majority will not
succeed and will become unemployed.
martin schiller wrote:
Michael Perelman said on 10/29/00 6:43 P
Regions with low average incomes are marked by the presence of large
numbers of relatively impoverished people in
Michael Perelman said on 10/29/00 7:28 P
Martin, exactly. They line up for the few good jobs. The majority will not
succeed and will become unemployed.
Speechless.
But now I got a question about university and affirmative action. I just
saw a 60min segment about a lawsuit in U of Mich by