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Labor Market Policy Research Reports, April 30 – May 4, 2012Here is this week's roundup of labor-market policy research reports:
Center for American Progress
Women and Obamacare: What’s at Stake for Women if the Supreme Court Strikes Down the Affordable Care Act?
Jessica Arons
Preparing All Teachers to Meet the Needs of English Language Learners: Applying Research to Policy and Practice for Teacher Effectiveness
Jennifer F. Samson and Brian A. Collins
Center for Law and Social Policy
Workforce Investment Act Reauthorization May Move Youth Development Field Back a Decade: Analysis of H.R. 4297 through a Youth Advocacy Lens
Linda Harris and Kisha Bird
CEPR and / May 04, 2012
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Latin America and the Caribbean
Argentina and the Magic Soybean: The Commodity Export Boom That Wasn’tMark Weisbrot / May 04, 2012
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Job Slowdown Continues into April, but Unemployment Still Edges DownwardDean Baker / May 04, 2012
Article Artículo
Change in Employment-to-Population Ratio, Dec 2007-Apr 2012May 4, 2012
CEPR / May 04, 2012
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NPR Gets It Wrong, Overspending Did Not Get Spain Into Its CrisisDean Baker / May 04, 2012
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Public Pensions as Stimulus and the Problem of Recession DeniersMost of the country is well aware of the fact that the United States is still suffering from the effects of the recession. The 8.2 percent unemployment rate is extraordinarily high. More importantly, the employment-to-population ratio, the percentage of people who hold jobs, is still almost 5 percentage points below its pre-recession level.
The fact that the country is still suffering from the recession is essential in assessing Andrew Bigg's dismissal of the idea that public pensions can provide stimulus to the economy. Biggs is a prominent conservative economist who served in the Bush administration and is now at the American Enterprise Institute.
Biggs ridicules the idea that public pensions can provide stimulus, deriding it as the "broken window" fallacy in economics. This is the idea that economic growth could be increased by breaking windows, because we would then have to spend money to repair the windows.
In fact, because the economy is still suffering from recession -- it has large amounts of unemployed workers and idle capacity -- breaking windows would in fact generate demand and employment right now. The main problem facing the U.S. economy at the moment is a lack of demand and anything that creates demand would in fact increase growth and jobs.
CEPR / May 04, 2012
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Latin America and the Caribbean
Haiti’s Fight for TransparencyJake Johnston / May 03, 2012
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Letter to Sen. Isakson: Social Security Is Not 'Going Broke'Dean Baker / May 03, 2012
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Mitt Romney's Partner in Crime: Ed Conard's Unintended ConsequencesDean Baker / May 03, 2012
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Robert Samuelson Doesn't Want Us to Think Speculation Affects Oil PricesDean Baker / May 03, 2012
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Not All Economists Expect Spain's Recession to Bring About DeflationDean Baker / May 03, 2012
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The Fault for a Trade Deficit is by Definition the Value of the CurrencyDean Baker / May 03, 2012
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Collateral Damage: Thoughts from Mitt Romney's Partner In CrimeDean Baker / May 03, 2012
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Everyone Agrees That the Decline in Private-Sector Pay Has Been UnderstatedDean Baker / May 02, 2012
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Lack of Data Prevents Measurement of Aid Effectiveness, ImpactYesterday, Vijaya Ramachandran and Julie Walz of the Center for Global Development provided a nice overview of the U.S government’s review of its Haiti earthquake response. Ramachandran and Walz found that while the review includes “some frank and enlightening assessments of USG [U.S. government] response and coordination” it contained “very little discussion of aid accountability.”
As Ramachandran and Walz point out, the authors of the review couldn’t determine the effectiveness or impact of aid because of a “disquieting lack of data.” Part of the problem seems to stem from how data collection and management is viewed by aid workers and USG employees, who made up the vast majority of sources for the review. The report states:
During the Haiti response, limitations related to information management followed two major lines. First, there were limited data available for tactical and operational decisions; and second, there were overwhelming requests for data and information from policy leaders in Washington that made systematic data collection more difficult. These demands were often driven by reports in the media.
Thankfully, the authors note that at least “some” of those they interviewed understood that the former led to the latter: limited availability of data was what generated the “overwhelming” number of requests. Others told the authors that requests for information “detracted from the on-ground response” as they were forced to “’chase down’ facts.”
Of course, data is important to the on-the-ground response as well, as the report points out:
Data collection, through surveys and assessments, is an essential component for managing a disaster response. Surveys and assessments are used to identify the needs of the affected population to direct the response. Ideally, these types of data can be used to measure the overall impact of the humanitarian response.
Jake Johnston / May 02, 2012