Jobs

Every American who wants to work should be able to get a job. When stable employment is available to all, it improves the welfare of the country not only because more people are working, but because at full employment, employers have to compete for personnel, raising wages for workers more broadly. Moreover, workers of color and those without four-year college degrees—who have substantially higher unemployment—gain the most when the economy approaches genuine full employment. To make employers genuinely value their low- and middle-wage workers—no matter where they live or what credentials they hold—lawmakers must pursue policies that make more jobs available, and reduce barriers to employment.

EARN groups develop and advocate for policies that will create good jobs, such as investments in infrastructure and responsible economic development programs, tailoring programs target underserved communities and areas of high unemployment. They also work to reduce barriers to employment by supporting workforce development programs with good labor standards, sector partnerships, and policies such as ban-the-box that help formerly incarcerated individuals rejoin the workforce. Lastly, EARN groups’ work to strengthen state unemployment insurance programs, so that unemployed workers have support when looking for a new job.

Publications

Innovative Training Solutions for Shifting Workforce Demands

  • July 5, 2017
  • Staff Report

Pairing skilled workers with quality, high-paying jobs is one way to ensure Mississippi families succeed. However, limited access to skills training and low educational attainment keep many workers from securing good-paying skilled jobs. This gap between middle-skill positions and a comparably skilled workforce limits productivity for employers and access to jobs that support self-sufficiency for working families. Bridging the gap starts with investments in working families and skills training opportunities that are accessible for all Mississippians. This brief examines two enterprising programs tackling the intersections of persistent poverty, low educational attainment levels, and high unemployment rates, which threaten the economic security of Mississippians.

Building Opportunity: Investing in local and disadvantaged residents with Community Workforce Agreements

The City of San Jose is projected to invest $1.42 billion over the next five years in public construction projects.

Yet the City currently has no provisions in place to direct those taxpayer dollars towards tackling one of the biggest challenges facing our communities: access to good, middle-wage jobs and career pathways.

Our analysis of payroll records for a sample of recent projects found that historically under-represented groups have largely been left out of these public construction projects and the career opportunities they represent.