Labor Markets, Wages, & Poverty
Do Alternative Households Improve Paid Employment Outcomes in Brazil?

PERI researcher James Heintz and Cicero Braga explore the labor market implications of household formation among same-sex married couples in Brazil, comparing them with different-sex married couples and unpartnered individuals. They provide a descriptive overview of same-sex households and analyzes patterns of partnership formation, racial and educational endogamy/homogamy, and paid employment outcomes. They find that that same-sex couples may benefit from household formation by adopting alternatives to traditional patriarchal dynamics. Their results highlight the importance of recognizing diverse household structures to fully understand economic well-being and inequities.
Overwork by U.S. Teachers and Prospects for Work-Time Reductions

PERI researchers Katherine Moos and Noe Wiener analyze the focus group interviews they conducted with public school teachers in Massachusetts about reducing work hours to improve their working conditions. The teachers reported long work hours and a significant “mental load”—both of which affect teachers’ quality of life, physical and mental health, relationships with their families, and desire to keep teaching. The teachers expressed eagerness to include work-time reductions in future union contracts, but skepticism that their school districts had the fiscal space or political will to achieve this goal.
Labor Markets, Wages, & Poverty Research and Commentary
Social Attitudes, Labor Law, and Union Organizing: Toward A New Economics of Union Density
Thomas I. Palley and Robert M. LaJeunesse
Exploring the Demographic Factors Affecting Passage of Living Wage Ordinances
Oren M. Levin-Waldman
Economic Analysis of the Florida Minimum Wage Proposal
Robert Pollin, Mark D. Brenner and Jeannette Wicks-Lim
The Economic Impact of Living Wage Ordinances
Mark D. Brenner
Measuring the Impact of Living Wage Laws: A Critical Appraisal of David Neumark's How Living Wage Laws Affect Low-Wage Workers and Low-Income Families
Mark D. Brenner, Jeannette Wicks-Lim and Robert Pollin