Energy and employment
The relationship of energy and employment is an essential ingredient of the current energy-policy debate. Energy, in its various forms, is an almost universal input to the production and consumption of goods and services in modern society, yet little attention is paid to its employment impacts. Far too little attention is being paid to the impact that changes in the sources, uses, and prices of energy will have on the level, location, and structure of employment in the U.S. economy. Unless their consequences are foreseen, energy solutions may have profound and sometimes devastating effects upon regions, industries, and jobs. This study addresses eight areas of this relationship: labor supply and demand in the energy sector; socio-economic impacts of energy development; coal, electricity, and employment; energy as a factor in the production/consumption process; alternative technologies and employment; developing an energy/employment modeling capability; research priorities; and policy recommendations related to energy/employment relationships. 40 references, 7 figures, 22 tables.
- OSTI ID:
- 6277071
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
POLICY AND ECONOMY
EMPLOYMENT
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
ENERGY POLICY
ECONOMIC IMPACT
ENERGY SOURCE DEVELOPMENT
SOCIO-ECONOMIC FACTORS
PRODUCTIVITY
MANPOWER
WORK
GOVERNMENT POLICIES
INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS
290200* - Energy Planning & Policy- Economics & Sociology
530100 - Environmental-Social Aspects of Energy Technologies- Social & Economic Studies- (-1989)