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Keywords:population OR Population 

Journal Article
A labor vacuum with no population suction

Fedgazette , Volume 14 , Issue Sep , Pages 3

Journal Article
Employment patterns during the recovery: Who are getting the jobs and why?

Employment gains during the recovery have differed sharply depending on workers' level of education, age, and gender. Workers with high levels of education, workers age 55 and older, and men have experienced the strongest employment gains in the recovery. ; Sahin and Willis analyze these employment patterns and find that the patterns appear to reflect two key factors: long-term trends and cyclical fluctuations. The strong employment growth for highly educated and older workers is a continuation of longer term shifts toward a more highly educated workforce and the aging of the baby boom ...
Economic Review , Issue Q III , Pages 5-34

Journal Article
The Texas challenge in the 21st century

Banking and Community Perspectives , Issue 1 , Pages 6-8

Journal Article
Research spotlight: From housing bust to baby bust?

Related Link: https://www.richmondfed.org/-/media/richmondfedorg/publications/research/econ_focus/2013/q1/research_spotlight_weblinks.cfm
Econ Focus , Volume 17 , Issue 1Q , Pages 11

Journal Article
Voting for ZPG

FRBSF Economic Letter

Journal Article
New from the Richmond Fed’s Regional Matters blog

Econ Focus , Volume 24 , Issue 3Q , Pages 2

Working Paper
Postwar trends in metropolitan employment growth: decentralization and deconcentration

A key finding to emerge from this study is that the widely studied suburbanization or decentralization of employment and population is only part of the story of postwar urban evolution. Another important part of the story is a postwar trend of relatively faster growth of jobs and people in the smaller and less-dense MSAs (deconcentration). The authors find that postwar growth in employment (and to a lesser extent population) has favored metropolitan areas with smaller levels of employment (population) density. These trends are shared by major regions of the country and by manufacturing and ...
Working Papers , Paper 99-10

Journal Article
Growing slowly, getting older: demographic trends in the Third District states

National trends such as slower population growth, an aging population, and immigrants as a larger component of the population are mirrored in the Third District states (Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware). These trends are likely to persist and perhaps even accelerate well into the future. In "Growing Slowly, Getting Older: Demographic Trends in the Third District States," Tim Schiller reviews these trends and their possible interaction with health care and retirement benefit programs nationally and in the Third District states.
Business Review , Issue Q4 , Pages 21-28

Journal Article
Population, sprawl and immigration trends in Eighth District metro areas vary widely

The Regional Economist , Issue Jul , Pages 16-17

Monograph
Gone to Texas: immigration and the transformantion of the Texas economy

The United States welcomes more immigrants than any other country, and Texas welcomes more migrants?foreign and domestic?than any other state. Nearly half of all new arrivals to the state are foreign born. With a population of over 4 million immigrants, Texas is one of the top three states in terms of the number of foreign born living within its borders. Immigration to Texas has been both a cause and consequence of rapid regional growth. The strong economy and the Texas business model?low taxes, few regulations and a low cost of labor?have attracted many businesses and workers in recent ...
Monograph

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