33,208 research outputs found
Strengthening State Financial Aid Policies for Low-Income Working Adults
Explains the need to expand state financial aid programs to help the working poor enroll in college. Recommends funding new aid for working adults as well as strengthening existing aid to meet their needs, and describes recent state initiatives
Improving Student Success by Strengthening Developmental Education in Community Colleges: The Role of State Policy
Outlines the need to strengthen community college students' basic English and math skills as required for college courses in order to meet workforce needs. Describes promising approaches to improving developmental education and recommends state policies
Did Big Government's Largesse Help the Locals? The Implications of WWII Spending for Local Economic Activity, 1939-1958
Studies of the development of local economies often point to large-scale World War II military spending as a source of long-term economic growth, even though the spending declined sharply after the demobilization. We examine the longer term impact of the temporary war spending on county economies using a variety of measures of socioeconomic activity: including per capita retail sales, the extent of manufacturing, population growth, the share of women in the work force, housing values and ownership, and per capita savings over the period 1940-1950. We find that in the longer term counties receiving more war spending per capita during the war experienced extensive growth due to increases in population but not intensive growth, as the war spending had very small impacts on per capita measures of economic activity.
Spitzer, Gaia, and the Potential of the Milky Way
Near-future data from ESA's Gaia mission will provide precise, full
phase-space information for hundreds of millions of stars out to heliocentric
distances of ~10 kpc. This "horizon" for full phase-space measurements is
imposed by the Gaia parallax errors degrading to worse than 10%, and could be
significantly extended by an accurate distance indicator. Recent work has
demonstrated how Spitzer observations of RR Lyrae stars can be used to make
distance estimates accurate to 2%, effectively extending the Gaia, precise-data
horizon by a factor of ten in distance and a factor of 1000 in volume. This
Letter presents one approach to exploit data of such accuracy to measure the
Galactic potential using small samples of stars associated with debris from
satellite destruction. The method is tested with synthetic observations of 100
stars from the end point of a simulation of satellite destruction: the shape,
orientation, and depth of the potential used in the simulation are recovered to
within a few percent. The success of this simple test with such a small sample
in a single debris stream suggests that constraints from multiple streams could
be combined to examine the Galaxy's dark matter halo in even more detail --- a
truly unique opportunity that is enabled by the combination of Spitzer and Gaia
with our intimate perspective on the Galaxy.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Did Workers Pay for the Passage of Workers' Compensation Laws?
Market responses to legislative reforms often mitigate the expected gains that reformers promise in legislation. Contemporaries hailed workers' compensation as a boon to workers because it raised the amount of post-accident compensation paid to injured workers. Despite the large gains to workers, employers often supported the legislation. Analysis of several wage samples from the early 1900s shows that employers were able to pass a significant part of the added costs of higher post-accident compensation onto some workers in the form of reductions in wages. The size of the wage offsets, however, were smaller for union workers.
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