[Excerpt] New and used car dealerships are a fiercely competitive, cyclically sensitive segment of retail trade, but they show diverging trends in their number and in employment. From 32,000 in 1972, the number of automotive dealerships dropped to about 26,000 in 1996. In contrast, employment has grown from below 800,000 to over 1 million in the same period. As a result, the average dealership today is bigger, has more employees, and sells more cars. And as employment has increased, the occupational mix has changed, too.Auto_Dealers_are_Fewer.pdf: 87 downloads, before Oct. 1, 2020
Research summary: This article reviews structural change in the automotive sector from 1997 to 2007....
[Excerpt] In this Spotlight we present BLS data to provide insight into employment within the motor ...
Research summary: This article reviews structural change in the automotive sector from 1997 to 2007....
[Excerpt] The U.S. motor vehicle manufacturing industry\u27 employs 880,000 workers, or approximatel...
The U.S. motor vehicle manufacturing industry employs about 1 millions workers, or about 7.5% of the...
[Excerpt] The manufacturing sector of the U.S. economy has experienced substantial job losses since ...
Skinner, Cameron, J., The Future of Car Dealerships: Omnichannel Sales in the Experience Economy, B....
AutoNationhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/1344/2/94313.0001.001.pd
[Excerpt] The service-oriented economy has an undeservedly bad reputation. The notion of a service-o...
[Excerpt] Observers of Central Business District (CBD) retailing performance have reported many adju...
[Excerpt] The joint-employer doctrine is perhaps the hottest issue in labor and employment law for 2...
[Excerpt] As manufacturing processes have changed, factories with large numbers of workers have beco...
[Excerpt] From 2008 to 2012, the average age of U.S. households’ vehicles increased as owners held o...
Section I will present a brief historical overview of the U.S. auto industry since the 1960s. Sectio...
[Excerpt] Only a small proportion of U.S. workers is now employed in factories, as manufacturers hav...
Research summary: This article reviews structural change in the automotive sector from 1997 to 2007....
[Excerpt] In this Spotlight we present BLS data to provide insight into employment within the motor ...
Research summary: This article reviews structural change in the automotive sector from 1997 to 2007....
[Excerpt] The U.S. motor vehicle manufacturing industry\u27 employs 880,000 workers, or approximatel...
The U.S. motor vehicle manufacturing industry employs about 1 millions workers, or about 7.5% of the...
[Excerpt] The manufacturing sector of the U.S. economy has experienced substantial job losses since ...
Skinner, Cameron, J., The Future of Car Dealerships: Omnichannel Sales in the Experience Economy, B....
AutoNationhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/1344/2/94313.0001.001.pd
[Excerpt] The service-oriented economy has an undeservedly bad reputation. The notion of a service-o...
[Excerpt] Observers of Central Business District (CBD) retailing performance have reported many adju...
[Excerpt] The joint-employer doctrine is perhaps the hottest issue in labor and employment law for 2...
[Excerpt] As manufacturing processes have changed, factories with large numbers of workers have beco...
[Excerpt] From 2008 to 2012, the average age of U.S. households’ vehicles increased as owners held o...
Section I will present a brief historical overview of the U.S. auto industry since the 1960s. Sectio...
[Excerpt] Only a small proportion of U.S. workers is now employed in factories, as manufacturers hav...
Research summary: This article reviews structural change in the automotive sector from 1997 to 2007....
[Excerpt] In this Spotlight we present BLS data to provide insight into employment within the motor ...
Research summary: This article reviews structural change in the automotive sector from 1997 to 2007....