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Latino Workers in the Ongoing Recession


The response of Latino immigrants to the Great Recession - jstor

Both Cadena and Kovak (2013) and. Glewwe and Hall (1998) found that low-skilled immigrant workers are more likely to move for job opportunities than are higher- ...

Recession Hits Young Workers Hardest

Recession unemployment rates for older workers rose to 11.3 percent. Young workers of color were especially impacted by the economic crisis.

Treasury Department Report Card: Latino Business Ownership Up ...

In contrast, in the four years following the start of the Great Recession ... Latino workers fell, and rose only slightly for Black workers.

and U.S.-Born Latinos Fare During Recessions and Recoveries

We focus on how prime-aged Latino workers and their families did as the U.S. economy ... The impact of the pandemic recession on Latino poverty is still ...

Economic slowdown likely to force workers to accept lower quality jobs

Despite a nascent recovery during 2021, the continuing shortage of better job opportunities is likely to worsen, the study says. The current ...

0909_labor day_cover.indd - California Budget and Policy Center

The Recession Has Diminished Workers' Earnings. 10 ... unemployment rate for California's Latino workers increased ... the current downturn than during ...

Immigrants Equilibrate Local Labor Markets - andrew.cmu.ed

Great Recession more than 75 percent of Mexican immigrants' geographic response ... ongoing trend in the pre-Recession period, as shown in online Appendix ...

Does residence in an ethnic community help immigrants in a ...

... labor market outcomes and using the current recession as a source of exogenous variation. ... "Ethnic Enclave Residence & Employment Accessibility of Latino ...

Analysis | Page 4 | National Equity Atlas

... current economic crisis. Toward an Equitable ... The same groups of workers hardest hit by the pandemic recession – Latinx workers ... Black and Latino ...

Weathering the Storm? The Great Recession and the Employment ...

We find that, during the recession, Mexican immigrants were the most likely to remain continuously employed. However, immigrant workers also experienced high ...

The COVID-19 Recession: An Opportunity to Reform our Low Wage ...

Current proposals to expand access to unemployment insurance, support businesses to keep workers ... jobs as a result of the crisis. The ...

A Sure Bet In Case of a Recession: The U.S. Latino Market

Latinos Work: Latino contribution to the U.S. labor force is just as impressive. From 2010 to 2019, Latinos added an average of more than ...

Recession Graduates: The Long-lasting Effects of an Unlucky Draw

Previous studies that have focused mainly on college graduates entering the labor market have found that economic fluctuations can have lasting consequences.

Black and Hispanic Women Lag in Recovering from the Recession

[iii] U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey,”

The economic state of Latinos in the US: Determined to thrive

... jobs for Latino workers; and removing bias and discrimination. Winning the US Latino consumer, worker, saver, and entrepreneur is an outsize ...

How the Great Recession Changed American Workers

Hispanic woman doing financial paperwork in her home The State of ... current levels of around 64% to around 50% by 2050, 20 percentage ...

The youth, work ethic and patriotism of Latinos will pull us out of the ...

As experts ponder how America will pull itself out of the COVID-19 recession, one thing I know for certain is that Latino workers, homebuyers, ...

Arizona's Latino workers worry about surviving coronavirus recession

According to a survey by the New York City University Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, four out of 10 Latino workers lost ...

Immigrant Employment through the Great Recession

While around 35 percent of Latino immigrants as well as native-born workers live in the South, only 22 percent of. Asian immigrants live there ...

The Recession Exposes the US' Failures on Worker Retraining

Unemployment is high, and many pre-pandemic jobs will not return. But the US spends a smaller share of its economy on training than most developed nations.