INCSpot

Jobs and Economic Security

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Wednesday, February 8, 2012
The Gateway Cities caucus got off to a strong start for 2012 with a very well attended presentation from Ted Carmen, representing the Public Private Partnership Committee of the Urban Land Institute. Ted made a powerful argument that the state’s historic tax credit should be recognized first and foremost as contributing to job creation. Citing research that suggests every two units of housing produced above the state’s business as usual level leads to one new job, Carmen demonstrated that the historic tax credit is at least revenue neutral under conservative assumptions.
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Wednesday, February 8, 2012

It’s a new year, and annual census figures for US cities were recently released. MassINC has combed through these numbers to provide a fresh look at the state of the state’s Gateway Cities. This analysis reveals a sharp dichotomy. Gateway Cities are fairing well economically. Most are gaining population and most have recovered the jobs lost in the Great Recession. But as is often the case with cities, residents don’t always do as well economically as the urban economy in their midst.

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Friday, July 8, 2011
Concentrated poverty is a big problem for many urban communities, including a number of the state’s Gateway Cities. Studies show that concentrating poor families in neighborhoods with other extremely low-income residents magnifies the negative effects of poverty. Crime, high school dropout rates, teen pregnancy rates, and substance abuse are all higher than they would otherwise be when poverty is highly concentrated in a neighborhood.
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Friday, July 8, 2011
Research from Andy Sum and Northeastern University’s Center for Labor Market Studies documents the important connection between holding down a job in high school and attachment to the labor force in later years. Professor Sum’s research tells us that high Gateway City teen unemployment rates could have economic consequences that persist well into the future. Budget makers have been struggling to preserve the programs that these communities need to give high school students employment opportunities. Here’s a quick summary of three youth job programs and their funding prospects for the new fiscal year.
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Thursday, November 4, 2010
By John Schneider

Now that the election is over, the real work begins.  And the real work for Governor Patrick for next year is all about WORK and how we can get more of it here in Massachusetts.
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Thursday, September 16, 2010
By John Schneider

Brookings policy honcho and MassINC board member Bruce Katz’s call today in Politico about an emerging “pragmatic caucus” led by leaders in states and cities around the nation is just what we “wonk & rollers” want to hear.  It’s time for a lot more “bottom-up innovation”—too bad most of the media isn’t paying attention.  We got issues; now we need some new solutions (and being mad as hell isn’t going to get us very far).
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Thursday, July 29, 2010
By John Schneider

Our colleagues at the Metropolitan Policy Program at Brookings have released a new report about how the top 100 metro areas are doing in boosting U.S. exports across the globe.  Why does it matter?  Because, according to Brookings, increasing the nation’s export capacity is a sure path to stronger job growth.
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Monday, July 19, 2010
By Michael Jonas

What to do with Boston’s Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway?
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Wednesday, June 9, 2010

By Ben Forman

I participated yesterday in a forum on the connection between housing and the economy held by the Home Builders Association of Massachusetts. The event marked the release of a report demonstrating the large net revenues residential construction provides for state and local governments.

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Monday, March 29, 2010
Senate President Therese Murray's economic development bill scheduled for debate this Thursday includes a number of smart ideas.
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Monday, March 15, 2010
By John Gillespie and David Zweig

We don’t come to the subject of corporate boards as antagonists.  Yet even with our experience in the business world and our MBA education, we couldn’t understand how boards came to operate the way they do, and how they’ve come apart. We could easily see how remote and impenetrable they would appear to most of the millions of shareholders who depend on them—in spite of the fact that boards are elected by shareholders and are legally required to represent their interests.
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Friday, March 5, 2010
By Ben Forman

MassINC has argued that the benefits of economic development spending should be quantifiable in order to justify taxpayer investment. But we recognize that this is challenging work.
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Friday, January 29, 2010

By Greg Torres and Bruce Mohl

The launch of a new website isn’t that unusual today, but here at MassINC it’s a huge step forward. It gives the organization a vibrant platform from which it can reach out to our many audiences in a more direct and engaging way. You can review our latest research on family financial skills, follow our advocacy on behalf of Gateway Cities, sign up for an event, or read CommonWealth magazine online.

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Friday, January 29, 2010

By Mary Beth Meehan

American cities don’t die; they change. Global forces push and pull – industries move and take their jobs with them, economies shift focus, wars around the globe drive people from their homes – and our hometowns struggle to keep their balance.

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Friday, January 22, 2010

An interview with Mark Erlich, Executive Secretary-Treasurer, New England Council of Carpenters 

"To understand what’s ahead for the American worker, you have to look back on what’s been happening in this country for the last three decades. From my years in the labor movement and certainly in my lifetime, I’ve watched us become a different kind of society with a different set of values. Over the last 30 years, there has been an unprecedented growth in income inequality. Mark Erlich Eighty percent of Americans have seen their wages diminish or stagnate.  Now it takes two wage earners in a family to make the equivalent of what one used to earn. Not only is this alarming on its own but it represents a dramatic turn in a society that was on a trajectory to greater parity after World War II."

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Thursday, December 31, 2009

By Marj Malpiede

One of the many lessons that has come out of the sub-prime mortgage crisis, if not the entire economic downturn, is the need for new thinking in the areas of financial literacy and consumer protection.  As part of new program called Family Financial  Skills, MassINC pulled together a group of experts to discuss what can be done to increase citizen’s education on financial services while addressing the increased risks families are forced to undertake. 

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