In recent years, New England has done itself proud. The chronic post-World War II decline in its manufacturing sector has been replaced by what for the present at least continues to be a record growth in services directly and indirectly related to high technology and a continuing competitiveness in high technology itself. As a result, the region leads the nation in growth in per capita income and enjoys the lowest level of unemployment in the country as well. Self-congratulation, however, is too often a prescription for complacency, and complacency inhibits the kind of searching inquiry which assumes that economic miracles are not the result of a divine intervention by a benign providence partial to the presumed moral superiority of New Eng...
While New Hampshire has the highest labor force participation (71 percent) and the second-lowest une...
As economists continue to explain why growth will slow and inflation will reemerge, the Massachusetts...
What follows is an analysis of the key macroeconomic trends in the six New England states. Using dat...
New England\u27s recent economic revitalization is largely attributed to the region\u27s success in ...
This article examines the problem of poverty in New England during the current period of economic pr...
Housing is a major economic factor for any region. Over the last several years, dramatically increas...
Less than ten years ago, the Sun Belt states were the focus of the kind of excessive attention we ha...
Over the years, public policy issues have proliferated, and with proliferation has come the inevitab...
New England\u27s rapidly aging population, its traditionally low fertility rate, and the fact that n...
In this issue of the New England Journal of Public Policy, we present a potpourri of articles dispar...
In this issue of the New England Journal of Public Policy, we present a potpourri of articles dispar...
In this issue of the New England Journal of Public Policy, we present a potpourri of articles dispar...
In the last few years, poverty rates have remained constant in the New England states. The effort to...
In the last few years, poverty rates have remained constant in the New England states. The effort to...
Although by some measures New Englanders are doing well economically, the region has experienced the...
While New Hampshire has the highest labor force participation (71 percent) and the second-lowest une...
As economists continue to explain why growth will slow and inflation will reemerge, the Massachusetts...
What follows is an analysis of the key macroeconomic trends in the six New England states. Using dat...
New England\u27s recent economic revitalization is largely attributed to the region\u27s success in ...
This article examines the problem of poverty in New England during the current period of economic pr...
Housing is a major economic factor for any region. Over the last several years, dramatically increas...
Less than ten years ago, the Sun Belt states were the focus of the kind of excessive attention we ha...
Over the years, public policy issues have proliferated, and with proliferation has come the inevitab...
New England\u27s rapidly aging population, its traditionally low fertility rate, and the fact that n...
In this issue of the New England Journal of Public Policy, we present a potpourri of articles dispar...
In this issue of the New England Journal of Public Policy, we present a potpourri of articles dispar...
In this issue of the New England Journal of Public Policy, we present a potpourri of articles dispar...
In the last few years, poverty rates have remained constant in the New England states. The effort to...
In the last few years, poverty rates have remained constant in the New England states. The effort to...
Although by some measures New Englanders are doing well economically, the region has experienced the...
While New Hampshire has the highest labor force participation (71 percent) and the second-lowest une...
As economists continue to explain why growth will slow and inflation will reemerge, the Massachusetts...
What follows is an analysis of the key macroeconomic trends in the six New England states. Using dat...