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Making Sense of Incentives
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 180

Making Sense of Incentives

Bartik provides a clear and concise overview of how state and local governments employ economic development incentives in order to lure companies to set up shop—and provide new jobs—in needy local labor markets. He shows that many such incentive offers are wasteful and he provides guidance, based on decades of research, on how to improve these programs.

From Preschool to Prosperity
  • Language: en

From Preschool to Prosperity

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014
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  • Publisher: Unknown

This book is focused on the key policy issues that today face early childhood education in the United States.

Investing in Kids
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 439

Investing in Kids

This book presents arguments for the following propositions: Local economic development strategies in the United States should include extensive investments in high quality early childhood programs, such as prekindergarten (pre K) education, child care, and parenting assistance. Economic development policies should also include reforms in business tax incentives. But economic development benefitsChigher earnings per capita in the local communityCcan be better achieved if business incentives are complemented by early childhood programs. Economic development benefits can play an important role in motivating a grassroots movement for investing in our kids.

Jobs for the Poor
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 486

Jobs for the Poor

Even as the United States enjoys a booming economy and historically low levels of unemployment, millions of Americans remain out of work or underemployed, and joblessness continues to plague many urban communities, racial minorities, and people with little education. In Jobs for the Poor, Timothy Bartik calls for a dramatic shift in the way the United States confronts this problem. Today, most efforts to address this problem focus on ways to make workers more employable, such as job training and welfare reform. But Bartik argues that the United States should put more emphasis on ways to increase the interest of employers in creating jobs for the poor—or the labor demand side of the labor m...

Who Benefits from State and Local Economic Development Policies?
  • Language: en

Who Benefits from State and Local Economic Development Policies?

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1991
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Approaches to Economic Development
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 346

Approaches to Economic Development

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1999
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  • Publisher: SAGE

This Reader presents a selection of articles from Economic Development Quarterly, the premier journal for practitioners and academics of local economic development. The pieces chosen cover both the breadth and the cutting edge of real world economic development practices.

Incentives to Pander
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 271

Incentives to Pander

An examination of why politicians choose to employ targeted tax incentives to firms that are inefficient and distortionary.

Promise Nation
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 151

Promise Nation

Michelle Miller-Adams presents the most accessible and comprehensive overview available of the emergence and development of the Promise movement nationwide as well as an up-to-date assessment of available research on the impacts of such programs.

Putting Poor People to Work
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 210

Putting Poor People to Work

Today, a college education is increasingly viewed as the gateway to the American Dream—a necessary prerequisite for social mobility. Yet recent policy reforms in the United States effectively steer former welfare recipients away from an education that could further their career prospects, forcing them directly into the workforce where they often find only low-paying jobs with little opportunity for growth. In Putting Poor People to Work, Kathleen Shaw, Sara Goldrick-Rab, Christopher Mazzeo, and Jerry A. Jacobs explore this troubling disconnect between the principles of "work-first" and "college for all." Using comprehensive interviews with government officials and sophisticated data from s...

The Oxford Handbook of Urban Economics and Planning
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1027

The Oxford Handbook of Urban Economics and Planning

This volume embodies a problem-driven and theoretically informed approach to bridging frontier research in urban economics and urban/regional planning. The authors focus on the interface between these two subdisciplines that have historically had an uneasy relationship. Although economists were among the early contributors to the literature on urban planning, many economists have been dismissive of a discipline whose leading scholars frequently favor regulations over market institutions, equity over efficiency, and normative prescriptions over positive analysis. Planners, meanwhile, even as they draw upon economic principles, often view the work of economists as abstract, not sensitive to in...