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Women have recovered most of the ground lost after the 2008 financial crisis compared to men. Men worked in construction and other fields slower to recover, and women worked in retail, hospitality and healthcare which were less affected by the crisis.
Grouped Articles
Women Reach a Milestone in Job Market
Wall Street Journal 11/18/2013
More Men in Prime Working Ages Don't Have Jobs
Wall Street Journal 02/06/2014
Wall Street Journal 05/07/2012
Paid Leave Encourages Female Employees to Stay
New York Times 07/28/2014
How to Attract Female Engineers
New York Times 04/27/2015
To Lift Growth, Janet Yellen Says, Make It Easier for Women to Work
The New York Times 05/05/2017
Grouped Articles
Job Growth Eases Fears About Effect of Closing
New York Times 11/08/2013
Blurry Jobs Report Won't Let Fed Focus on Taper
Wall Street Journal 11/09/2013
Women Reach a Milestone in Job Market
Wall Street Journal 11/18/2013
Employers Gain Confidence to Hire
Wall Street Journal 12/07/2013
Hiring Slowdown Blurs Growth View
Wall Street Journal 01/20/2014
Confronting Old Problem May Require a New Deal
New York Times 01/28/2014
Germany's Ministry for Family Affairs recently completed a study showing minijobs for women in retail, healthcare and other fields puts women in deadend jobs and a situation of "lifelong economic powerlessness and dependence for women." The numbers for minijobs paying low wages in parttime work show large increases in 1999-2010, the same period when unemployment declined in Germany to 6.9% by 2013.
Grouped Articles
'Minijobs' Lift Employment But Mask German Weakness
Wall Street Journal 05/29/2013
German elections pit Merkel, challenger over poverty problems - The Washington Post
Washington Post 09/17/2013
Women Reach a Milestone in Job Market
Wall Street Journal 11/18/2013
Europe's Easy-Money Policy Snubs German Savers
Wall Street Journal 11/25/2013
German Coalition Reaches Deal but Faces Tough Party Vote
Wall Street Journal 11/27/2013
Americanized Labor Policy Is Spreading in Europe
New York Times 12/03/2013
The participation rate in the job market for men between 16-64 is dropping over time. It was 85% in the 1950's and has dropped continually after each recession. It is now at 65%. More and more men simply drop out of the labor market after failing to find jobs, creating a disturbing trend for the country. This does not show up in improving unemployment statistics.
Grouped Articles
Job Growth Eases Fears About Effect of Closing
New York Times 11/08/2013
Candid Criticism for Fed That Wasnât on the Agenda
New York Times 11/08/2013
Women Reach a Milestone in Job Market
Wall Street Journal 11/18/2013
Confronting Old Problem May Require a New Deal
New York Times 01/28/2014
More Men in Prime Working Ages Don't Have Jobs
Wall Street Journal 02/06/2014
Bayer: Pressure on Prices Has Bad Side Effects
Wall Street Journal 02/07/2012
In this US downturn men are hit harder than women with job losses in manufacturing and construction, the less educated hit hardest, and young people also hit hard.
Grouped Articles
New York Times 06/22/2013
Wanted: Jobs for the New 'Lost' Generation
Wall Street Journal 09/14/2013
Women Reach a Milestone in Job Market
Wall Street Journal 11/18/2013
Andy Grove: How America Can Create Jobs
BusinessWeek 07/01/2010
Wall Street Journal 10/02/2010
More Men in Prime Working Ages Don't Have Jobs
Wall Street Journal 02/06/2014
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