... conditions under which there will be afforded useful employment opportunities, including self-employment, for those able, willing, and seeking to work, and to promote maximum employment, production, and purchasing power. Official Congressional Directory - Page 519by United States. Congress - 1948Full view - About this book
| Conservation of natural resources - 1969 - 1076 pages
...coordinate and utilize all its plans, functions, resources for the purpose of creating and maintaining, in a manner calculated to foster and promote free competitive...promote maximum employment, production, and purchasing power. Now, that statement of policy has stood the test of time, and to implement it a Council of Economic... | |
| Labor laws and legislation - 1968 - 832 pages
...the "continuing policy and responsibility of the Federal Government to use all practicable means ... to foster and promote free competitive enterprise...promote maximum employment, production, and purchasing power. . . ." Professor Slesinger offers a review of the Economic Reports and describes the development... | |
| United States. Bureau of Labor Statistics - Labor - 1950 - 774 pages
...to be the continuing policy of the federal Government to promote conditions under which there would be afforded "useful employment opportunities, including...promote maximum employment, production, and purchasing power." The transition to a peacetime economy in fact proceeded much more smoothly, from the standpoint... | |
| Labor laws and legislation - 1955 - 834 pages
...There we find a policy declaration that specifies Federal responsibility for creating and maintaining "conditions under which there will be afforded useful...self-employment for those able, willing, and seeking to work." Unemployment is not specifically mentioned. The phrase "able, willing, and seeking to work" is to be... | |
| United States. Bureau of Labor Statistics - 1947 - 1200 pages
...Unemployment 1 THE Employment Act of 1946 declares that it is the policy of the Federal Government to foster "conditions under which there will be afforded useful...self-employment, for those able, willing, and seeking to work." Under the best of conditions, however, there will always be some unemployment arising from delays involved... | |
| United States. Bureau of Labor Statistics - Labor - 1947 - 1212 pages
...Unemployment l THE Employment Act of 1946 declares that it is the policy of the Federal Government to foster "conditions under which there will be afforded useful...self-employment, for those able, willing, and seeking to work." Under the best of conditions, however, there will always be some unemployment arising from delays involved... | |
| United States. Bureau of Labor Statistics - Labor - 1958 - 762 pages
...them." 16 In the United States, the Employment Act of 1946 declares that it is Federal policy to create conditions "under which there will be afforded useful...self-employment, for those able, willing, and seeking to work . . ." In fact, during the 12 years, 1946-57, unemployment in the United States has ranged from 2.5... | |
| Labor laws and legislation - 1976 - 694 pages
...maintaining . . . conditions under which there will be afforded useful employment opportunities . . . for those able, willing, and seeking to work, and...promote maximum employment, production, and purchasing power." Among these goals, the one which has probably received the greatest attention over the three... | |
| Labor laws and legislation - 1957 - 842 pages
...is to make clear that the primary test by which our economy is to be judged is whether it provides "useful employment opportunities, including self-employment, for those able, willing, and seeking to work." It is the trade union movement which in many cases has taken the leadership in focusing attention on... | |
| Employment agencies - 1955 - 568 pages
...and utilize all its plans, functions, and resources for the purpose of creating and maintaining . . . conditions under which there will be afforded useful...promote maximum employment, production, and purchasing power." So long as the national economy moved strongly and firmly upward, the economies of most local... | |
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