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Case Studies from
The Wall Street Journal
Case Studies from
The Wall Street Journal
Chapter 1: Going Green Is No Sweet Deal for Sugar Cane Workers
Chapter 2: So, You Want to Study Law? Maybe You’d Better Start with the Laws of Supply and Demand (Or, I Hope I Don’t Get Sued for This)
Chapter 3: For General Motors and its Workers, Bad News Comes in Three Ways
Chapter 4: Read This Case and Get a Guaranteed "A"
Chapter 5: Labor Market Frictions, or How Things Can Get Hot and Sticky
Chapter 6: Choosing Hours of Work Might Actually Get a Little Easier For Some
Chapter 7: Could Home Be Where the Job Is? Or, There’s No (Work)Place Like Home
Chapter 8: Show Me Something Other Than the Money
Chapter 9: Making Human Capital Investments Pay Off by Cutting Costs and Increasing Benefits; Just Don’t Put "M.B.A." on the Card
Chapter 10: We Can’t Live (Prosperously) Without You, but We Might Be Willing to Try
Chapter 11: What if We Outsourced CEO Jobs to Low-Wage Countries?
Chapter 12: "Proving" Discrimination is a Multi-Faceted Challenge
Chapter 13: Facing Increasingly Difficult Times, Unions Forced to Change to Survive
Chapter 14: Rags to Riches or Riches to RagsNeither is Especially Likely
Chapter 15: A Forecaster's Nightmare: Predicting Job Creation in the early 21st Century
Chapter 16: Trade-offs Everywhere: If There’s No Such Thing as a Free Lunch, Is There Such a Thing as Free Trade?
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