81 results on '"Morath, Eric"'
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2. U.S. Job Openings Leveled Off Late in the Summer.
3. Federal Government Sent Workers Nearly $250 Billion in $600-a-Week Jobless Aid.
4. U.S. Jobless Claims Fell to 1.2 Million in Latest Week.
5. Businesses Hit Hard by Pandemic Drive U.S. Jobs Recovery.
6. Rise in Weekly Unemployment Claims Points to Faltering Jobs Recovery.
7. As $600-a-Week Jobless Aid Nears End, Congress Faces a Quandary.
8. U.S. Jobless Claims Held Nearly Steady at 1.3 Million in July 11 Week.
9. Layoffs Fell in May to Pre-Coronavirus Levels.
10. Coronavirus Pandemic Makes Unemployment Calculation Harder.
11. Coronavirus Pandemic Drives Unemployment Up Across U.S. Metro Areas.
12. State Jobless Rates for April Show Uneven Impact of Pandemic.
13. Unemployment Claims Data Point to Record Wave of Job Loss.
14. April Jobs Report Likely to Show Highest Unemployment Rate on Record.
15. Coronavirus Relief Often Pays Workers More Than Work.
16. States Are Catching Up on Unemployment-Payments Backlog, Labor Secretary Says.
17. U.S. Jobless Claims Top 20 Million Since Start of Shutdowns.
18. A Second Round of Coronavirus Layoffs Has Begun. Few Are Safe.
19. Lawmakers Seek New Ways to Cover Workers' Paychecks During Coronavirus.
20. Funding for Bigger Unemployment Payments Coming Next Week.
21. Record Unemployment Claims Unlikely to Show Up in Friday's March Jobs Report.
22. U.S. Employers Cut 701,000 Jobs in March.
23. Record 6.6 Million Americans Sought Unemployment Benefits Last Week.
24. March Jobs Report Unlikely to Show Full Impact of the Coronavirus Crisis.
25. Pennsylvania, With Most Jobless Claims in U.S., Could Foretell High Numbers Elsewhere.
26. Surge in Unemployment Claims Sparks Delayed Checks Amid Coronavirus Crisis.
27. Record Rise in Unemployment Claims Halts Historic Run of Job Growth.
28. U.S. Layoffs Likely Surged to Unprecedented Level This Past Week.
29. 'I Have Bills I Have to Pay.' Low-Wage Workers Face Brunt of Coronavirus Crisis.
30. U.S. Trade Gap Narrowed in January as Flows Slowed.
31. Coronavirus Risk Rises for U.S., Global Economies.
32. AI Is the Next Workplace Disrupter—and It's Coming for High-Skilled Jobs.
33. Work Stoppages Reach Highest Level in Nearly Two Decades.
34. Americans Joining Workforce at Record Rate.
35. U.S. Union Membership Hits Another Record Low: Number of union members fell by 170,000 in 2019, reducing share of workforce in labor unions to 10.3%.
36. As Jobs Cap 10 Years of Gains, Women Are Workforce Majority: U.S. added 145,000 jobs in December, marking longest stretch of annual increases in 80 years of data.
37. More Workers Eligible for Overtime Pay in 2020: Labor Department rule change is first in over 15 years, but critics say it still doesn't go far enough.
38. Rank-and-File Workers Get Bigger Raises: Short supply of labor, minimum-wage rises and increased poaching have helped lift wages for lower-income workers.
39. U.S. Business Investment Remains Sluggish but Could Pick Up in 2020: Progress on trade deals and improving global economy could nudge up investments.
40. As Trump Courts Unions, His Apprentice Plan Risks Alienating Them: Construction workers oppose a strategy the administration is considering to expand apprenticeships to employers and business groups.
41. The 5-Hour Workday Gets Put to the Test.
42. Germany’s Labor System Would Be Difficult to Import to U.S.
43. Required Tip-Sharing Gets Backing From Trump Administration.
44. A New Land Rover Drops, and Other Scenes From the Auto Show.
45. Acosta’s Record at Labor Department Draws White House Scrutiny.
46. Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta Is Stepping Down.
47. Top Democrats Call for Alex Acosta to Resign Over Jeffrey Epstein Case.
48. $15 Minimum Wage Would Leave 1.3 Million American Jobless, Lift as Many Out of Poverty.
49. Trump Administration Proposes New Type of Apprenticeship.
50. With Labor Market Tight, Some States Loosen Rules for Licensed Jobs.
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