An Input-output Model of the South Central Region of Texas

An Input-output Model of the South Central Region of Texas

Author: James R. Vinson

Publisher:

Published: 1972

Total Pages: 192

ISBN-13:

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Abstract : In order to provide state, local, and regional policy-makers and planners as well as businessmen with an analytic tool, an input--output economic analysis was made of the South Central region of Texas for the year 1967. The results of the study are presented in this report entitled, "An input-output model of the South Central region of Texas." This report provides an overview of the study region, including the geographic setting, demographic characteristics and economic factors of income, employment and earnings. Methodology and procedures of analyses used in the study are discussed. Suggestions as to how the findings of the study may be used as they relate to the total regional economy are presented along with some of the results of this study. The input-output tables for this region are included in this report.


Just Punishments

Just Punishments

Author: Peter Henry Rossi

Publisher: Transaction Publishers

Published:

Total Pages: 262

ISBN-13: 9780202367019

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The sentencing guidelines written by the U.S. Sentencing Commission for the federal crime courts were designed to lead to uniform the just punishments for convicted criminals. How well did the Commission's judgments about what were just punishments compare to the view of the American public? Using data from a 1994 national household survey, the authors compare the punishments described by the Commission to those desired by the public. Contrary to the frequency claims of excessive leniency on the part of judges that are often asserted by journalists and shapers of opinions, Rossi and Berk find strong correspondence between the median sentences deemed appropriate by the public and the sentences prescribed by the guidelines. Although the authors conclude that the Commission was able to match prescribed punishments closely to the American consensus for most crimes, in one category -- drug trafficking offenses -- the guidelines were much harsher in dealing with offenders. The national survey used a factorial survey as its design strategy, allowing for analysis of a large variety of federal crimes and variations in the social characteristics of convicted felons. A wealth of detail, along with ample graphic and tabular illustrations, extends the book's application to issues of consensus and variations in punitiveness by region and socioeconomic characteristics of respondents.


Looking for Work, Searching for Workers

Looking for Work, Searching for Workers

Author: Joshua L. Rosenbloom

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2002-03-25

Total Pages: 228

ISBN-13: 9780521002875

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The dynamic character of American industrialization produced imbalances between the supply of and demand for labor across cities and regions. This book describes how employers and job-seekers responded to these imbalances to create networks of labor market communication and assistance capable of mobilizing the massive redistribution of population that was essential to maintain the rapid pace of the nation's economic growth between the Civil War and World War I. It combines a detailed description of the emerging labor market institutions with a careful analysis of a variety of quantitative evidence to assess the broader economic implications for geographic wage convergence and for American economic growth. Despite an expansion in the geographic scope of labor markets at this time, the evidence suggests that labor market institutions reinforced regional divisions within the United States and left a lasting impact on the evolution of many other aspects of the employment relationship.