BLS DAILY REPORT, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1997: Today's News Release: "U.S. Import and Export Price Indexes - November 1997" indicates that the U.S. Import Price Index fell 0.3 percent in November. The decrease was attributable to a turnaround in petroleum prices, as well as the continuing decline in nonpetroleum import prices. The Export Price Index was unchanged in November, after decreasing in each of the previous 2 months. State and local governments accounted for 14.5 percent of the net increase in nonfarm payroll jobs in the 1990s, according to a new report released by the Rockefeller Institute of Government's Center of the Study of the States. The percentage of nonfarm payroll jobs in state and local government in the 1990-96 period varies widely among the states, ranging from 10.4 percent in Nevada to 23.2 percent in Wyoming. "The record of the 1990s confirms once again the major role of state and local governments as a key source of jobs in the American Economy," says Samuel M. Ehrenhalt, the report's author (Daily Labor Report, page A-1). Women in the United States and Canada have made the most progress of all female workers in breaking through the "glass ceiling" into middle management positions, but women worldwide continue to be blocked from the very top management jobs, the International Labor Organization says. ILO prepared its report "Breaking through the Glass Ceiling: Women in Management" for next week's meeting in Geneva of governments, employers, and workers from 20 countries to develop strategies to improve women's opportunities for management and top level positions. Women in management tend to be clustered in certain jobs to the point where these jobs are almost "feminized". These jobs, which include personnel and labor relations managers, are less likely to lead to top management jobs, according to the report. The hurdles facing women aspiring to management jobs fan be so formidable that they sometimes abandon efforts to make it to the top of the firm and instead form their own businesses, the report says (Daily Labor Report, page A-8). John M. Berry, writing in The Washington Post (page E1) says that Inflation in the United States has dropped to a 2 percent rate, the upper end of a range that many economists believe essentially represents price stability, a magical realm that every nation's central bank would like to shoot for in its monetary policy. Actual inflation over the past year has been so low that it may well meet Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan's test for price stability - not a zero inflation rate, but rather one low enough that it no longer is a factor in economic decisions made by consumers and business executives. The decline in inflation has already had a big payoff. It has allowed the Fed to let the nation's unemployment rate slip gradually to the lowest level in a quarter-century without having to stamp on the monetary brakes to keep inflation under control. In past episodes of such low joblessness, the Fed has rais3ed interest rates sharply to combat worsening inflation. Data in the accompanying chart is attributed to the Labor Department. Diplomats from more than 160 nations meeting in Kyoto, Japan, approved the world's most sweeping environmental treaty, which requires industrial nations to cut emissions of "greenhouse gases" to between 6 and 8 percent below 1990 levels staring in the year 2008 (The Wall Street Journal, page A2). An accompanying article to the Kyoto decision says that economists warn that the agreement to cure global warming, if implemented, could end up cooling the U.S. economy. Trying to figure the costs of bringing down carbon-dioxide emissions 7 percent below 1990 levels, beginning in 2008, won't be easy. As a result, there are massive differences in the ways experts see the potential economic fallout. Among other results that some fear are soaring energy prices, and massive layoffs of American workers. Should energy prices shoot up, six big U.S. industries - aluminum, cement, chemicals, oil, paper and steel - could suffer jobs cuts, concludes an analysis by the U.S. Energy Department.
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- Controversy over pro-capitalist anti-green tv show, Louis N Proyect Mon 08 Dec 1997, 18:21 GMT
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Mon 08 Dec 1997, 16:38 GMT
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- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Tue 09 Dec 1997, 16:58 GMT
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Wed 10 Dec 1997, 15:35 GMT
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Thu 11 Dec 1997, 22:07 GMT
- HMOs (was re: Doug's question), James Devine Mon 08 Dec 1997, 16:30 GMT
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- RE: HMOs (was re: Doug's question), Fellows, Jeffrey Mon 08 Dec 1997, 17:21 GMT
- Re: HMOs (was re: Doug's question), R. Anders Schneiderman Mon 08 Dec 1997, 18:59 GMT
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