Jena McGregor is a Forbes senior editor who covers the future of work. Dec 28, 2021, 07:00am EST Updated Apr 21, 2022, 08:17am EDT A 'Help Wanted' sign is posted beside Coronavirus safety guidelines ...
In a sea of suited and jacketed job seekers, Samantha Givens was hard to miss. Her neon-yellow vest and accompanying pom-pom beanie signaled her presence and offered a clue to her most recent previous ...
An increase in the number of J.D.s looking for work didn't hamper the 2021 employment rate Among recent grads, 83% found jobs that either require passing the bar or for which a J.D. offers an ...
Jobs in the renewable energy sector grew in 2021 as fossil fuel employment declined – even as fossil fuel production increased – according to a report released Tuesday by the Department of Energy.
The Labor Department's initial monthly jobs reports and Wall Street's estimates in 2021 weren't as reliable as usual. The U.S. economy added 4.9 million jobs in the first 10 months of the year, ...
New ABA figures show which U.S. law schools sent the most recent graduates to big law firms Large firms concentrate hiring among elite schools, data shows (Reuters) - Cornell Law School sent a higher ...
These are the top large metro areas for job growth in 2021, based on percentage increase in employment between December 2020 and December 2021. The analysis looked at the nation's 100 largest metro ...
Last year was a historic one for American jobs. A record number of workers quit their jobs while US employers had more positions to fill than ever before. In December, 4.3 million Americans quit their ...
BOISE, Idaho — Idaho has not remained untouched by the so-called "Great Resignation" that saw millions of American workers leave their jobs last year. According to Bureau of Labor Statistics data ...
About 50.5 million people quit their jobs in 2022, besting the prior record set in 2021, according to the federal JOLTS report. The pandemic-era trend of elevated voluntary departures came to be known ...