Gorbachev and Economic Reform in the Soviet Union
Two factors have rendered aggregate economic growth a weakened weapon against poverty in the modern U.S. economy. First, the increase in the national rate of divorce has increased the proportion of the population that lives in households that are headed by women, a group that has historically benefited less from aggregate economic activity as evidenced by the group's comparatively high poverty rates. Second, the relative shift in the sectoral composition of economic growth from manufacturing to private services yields jobs that are more often lower-paying, part-time, and intermittent positions, and consequently less helpful at remedying poverty.
Year of publication: |
1988
|
---|---|
Authors: | Goldman, Marshall I. |
Published in: |
Eastern Economic Journal. - Eastern Economic Association - EEA, ISSN 0094-5056. - Vol. 14.1988, 4, p. 331-335
|
Publisher: |
Eastern Economic Association - EEA |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Soviet Marketing : distribution in a controlled economy
Goldman, Marshall I., (1963)
-
Markt und Marketing der Sowjets : Verbraucherversorgung in der Sowjetunion
Goldman, Marshall I., (1964)
-
Russian energy : a blessing and a curse
Goldman, Marshall I., (1999)
- More ...