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by Patricia M. Flynn, Ross J. Gittell,
and Norman H. Sedgley
November/December 1999
New England has undergone significant change in its
employment and labor force over the past three decades.
Employment in the region has shifted from manufacturing
into services at a faster rate than it has in the United
States as a whole. Within manufacturing the trend has
been away from nondurable goods into high-value-added,
high-tech industries. In this transition, both income
and productivity have increased more rapidly in the
region than in the nation.
Recent trends in population, labor force, and college
degrees awarded pose threats to New England's long-term
prosperity, however. Growth in the region's high-tech
sector has lagged the nation's in recent years. Slow
labor force growth has contributed to low unemployment
rates, but it has also limited the pool of available
workers. The region has also lost share in producing
college graduates. The authors highlight both the opportunities
and the challenges facing the region as the twenty-first
century approaches.
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