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Keywords:Industries - New England 

Journal Article
Mid-life crisis on route 128

Regional Review , Issue Sum , Pages 6-11

Journal Article
How long will it last?

Regional Review , Issue Win , Pages 7-13

Journal Article
Regionalism picks up speed: New England states find common ground

Initiatives crossing northern New England state borders?including Amtrak?s Downeaster service, joint Maine and New Hampshire efforts to save Portsmouth Naval Shipyard jobs, and Northern Forest Center collaborations?suggest regional economic activity is bigger than ever.
Communities and Banking , Issue Win , Pages 20-22

Journal Article
A stronger New England through industry clusters

States understandably focus economic development efforts within their borders. But industry cluster strategies and greater collaboration across borders could do more for individual states and boost New England?s ability to compete globally.
Communities and Banking , Issue Fall , Pages 3-5

Journal Article
Job creation and destruction in Massachusetts: gross flows among industries

The Massachusetts economy has experienced wide swings in employment in the 1990s, losing over 10 percent of existing jobs in the 1990-91 recession (which began locally in 1989) and not surpassing its pre-recession job peak until early 1998. Within individual sectors of the economy, the losses and gains have been even greater, with many manufacturing industries losing jobs almost nonstop while some non-manufacturing industries have expanded markedly. This article examines these employment swings and attempts to better understand their dynamic underpinnings by disaggregating them into the ...
New England Economic Review , Issue Sep , Pages 33-52

Journal Article
Leapfrog and catch-up

Regional Review , Issue Q 1 , Pages 14-19

Journal Article
Tracking jobs in clean industries in New England

Tracking jobs in clean industries?often called ?green jobs??is difficult because, unlike the high-technology sector, the clean-industries sector lacks a standard definition of which industries the sector actually comprises. This article explores four definitions of the sector: two defined by measures developed by analysts at highly respected institutions, and two defined by measures we created based on widely used databases. We use these definitions to analyze the composition and concentration of jobs in clean industries in New England and each state in the region and compare these figures ...
New England Economic Indicators , Issue Q3 , Pages 4-14

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