Skip to Content
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsroom
  • Museum
  • Careers
  • Banking
  • Research
  • Markets
  • Publications
    • Periodicals
    • Data Releases
    • Speeches
  • Events
  • Education
  • People
  • Region
Growth in worker quality
  • Share
  • Print
    • Text Size
    • Smaller
    • Larger
EP cover
On This Page
Vol. 25, No. 4
  • Download Entire Publication
Last Updated: 11/05/2001

Growth in worker quality

Daniel Aaronson, Daniel G. Sullivan

This article shows that increases in the educational attainment and labor market experience of the U.S. work force have led to an advance in labor productivity of more than 0.2 percentage points per year since the early 1960s. Estimates show, however, some declaration in the pace of labor quality improvements toward the end of the 1990s. Forecasts call for a continued decline over the remainder of the current decade.

Subscribe Now

Register to receive email alerts when new issues are published.

Subscribe
More by this Author

Daniel Aaronson

  • The decline of job security in the 1990s: Displacement, anxiety, and their effect on wage growth
  • What Is Behind the Rise in Long-Term Unemployment?

Daniel G. Sullivan

  • Recent Trends in Job Displacement
Related Topics
  • Who Are Temporary Nurses?
  • Growth in Worker Quality
  • Recent Evidence on the Relationship Between Unemployment and Wage Growth
  • A Supply-side Explanation of European Unemployment
View All

Follow Us:

FaceBook RSS Twitter YouTube
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Newsroom
  • Subscribe
  • Tours
  • Careers
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, 230 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60604-1413, USA. Tel. (312) 322-5322
Copyright © 2012. All rights reserved. Please review our
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Notices