BLS DAILY REPORT, TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1999 RELEASED TODAY: In 1998, the proportion of U.S. families with at least one employed member was 82.6 percent, up 0.5 percentage point from 1997. Of the nation's 70.2 million families, 6.4 percent reported having an unemployed member, a decline of 0.6 percentage point from the previous year. ... The time married women with children spend working outside the home for pay has almost doubled in the past 3 decades, to an average of 1,200 hours per year, leaving them much less time for other things, including caring for their children, the Council of Economic Advisers said in a report released yesterday. The share of families headed by a single parent, usually a woman, rose to 30 percent of all families from 13 percent, and the number of hours worked annually by single parents also rose by about 300 hours during the same period, from 1969 to 1996, the report said. "The increase in time mothers spend in paid work, combined with the shift toward single parent families, has resulted in families on average experiencing a decrease of 22 hours per week in time available outside of paid work that parents could spend with children," CEA Chairman Janet L. Yellen said at a news conference. There is no recent data available to indicate whether parents have actually reduced the number of hours spent caring for their children or cut back on other activities. ... The report, "Families and the Labor Market, 1969-1999: Analyzing the 'Time Crunch,'" was prepared to buttress the administration's desire to find ways in which the government or private sector can raise the strictures of that "time crunch." ... (Washington Post, page E1). Countries that tax workers at older ages are driving a growing trend toward early retirement, thereby adding fiscal pressures to international retirement systems, according to a new study by the employee Benefit Research Institute. ... According to the study summary, there is a strong correlation between early retirement provisions of Social Security systems and labor force withdrawal rates. In France, for example, 60 percent of those working at the early retirement age of 60 leave the workforce at that age, EBRI said. ... The U.S. Social Security system offers married workers an actuarial adjustment for claiming delayed benefits and other features that avoid financial incentives to leave the workforce at age 62, but single workers and high-wage earners have a slight disincentive to remain in the workforce, according to the report. Once workers reach age 65, the Social Security earnings limit provides a stronger incentive to stop working, with implicit tax rates on work of 19 percent for married workers and 33 percent for single workers. The earnings limit reduces Social Security benefits for older workers who earn wages above certain thresholds. ... The nonprofit research organization noted that, while populations of all industrialized nations are aging rapidly and life expectancies are increasing, older workers are leaving the workforce at younger ages. In some developed countries, workforce participation rates of men ages 60 to 64 have fallen by 75 percent over the last 30 years, EBRI said. The study, written by Jonathan Gruber, an economist at MIT and an EBRI fellow, and David Wise, an economist at Harvard, focuses on retirement systems in the U.S., Germany, and France, but also discusses systems in eight other countries. ... (Daily Labor Report, page A-4). Burnout, work-family conflicts, and a tight labor market probably will increase unscheduled absences over the next 2 years, say about half the 401 employers surveyed by consulting firm CCH Inc., Riverwoods, Ill. Absenteeism hit a 7-year high last year, rising 25 percent from 1997. On average, employees used 5.5 out of 9.1 allotted sick days for the year. ... (Wall Street Journal "Work Week" column, page A1). Responding to increased competition and demands from individual investors for access to after-hours trading, the New York Stock Exchange will begin trading stocks in an extended evening session as early as July. The NYSE chairman said that the world's largest exchange is accelerating plans for extended hours in response to similar interest expressed by the rival Nasdaq Stock Market. The NYSE doesn't yet have concrete plans. ... Extended hours would revolutionize markets even as they cause headaches for brokerages and news organizations that will have to prepare for longer days. ... What is clear is that this is a move driven by the need to compete globally and the demands of individuals. ... (Washington Post, page E1; New York Times, page C6).
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