Labor

Labor Articles

By Kashif, Investment Analyst at PrivCo, a private company financial intelligence platform President Trump’s controversial immigration reform plans include amending the H1-B visa program, which is...
If economists and investors were looking for confirmation that the post-election rally was going to turn into real growth in economic readings, look no further than the January ADP Employment Report.
Los Angeles, with 1.7 million Mexican immigrants, which is more than 13% of its total population, faces major changes if the Trump administration implements some of its plans.
Aerospace workers' union files with NLRB to represent about 2,850 employees at Boeing's South Carolina 787 plant.
GM about to join Ford and Fiat Chrysler in announcing new U.S. investment, creating more U.S. jobs.
Amazon.com flexed its muscles as it showed business must be surging at an astonishing pace. The company said it would 100,000 full-time jobs in the United States in the next 18 months.
A recent study by analysts at Paysa, released on Tuesday, pointed to a 10% gap between the actual pay and the market value for more than a third of professionals in the technology industry.
Britain privatized the Royal Mail in 2013 and completed its exit from the service in 2015. Could the U.S. Postal Service do the same thing with an initial public offering?
A 24/7 Wall St. analysis showed that more than one out of every four cities adding the most workers last year was in Oregon.
Sprint may be about to add 5,000 jobs, , a decision President-elect Donald Trump took credit for, but the company's employment picture looks bleak over the long term.
In 2016, seven states approved raising their minimum wage to between $12 and $15 an hour. Another 18 cities and counties approved raising the minimum as well.
Incentives alone won't sell cars, sport utility vehicles and pickups, and that means that carmakers are going to have to take steps to reduce inventories, and the traditional method for doing that is...
Amazon.com workers in Germany will strike the company, according to a major union that has a number of members who work for the e-commerce firm.
The holidays are a particularly cruel time to lay off people, or to tell them they will be laid off soon. That has not stopped a number of companies from doing so.
As a result of the November election, about 2 million workers in four states will get a pay raise on January 1.