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Disclaimer
Links on
these pages to commercial sites do not represent endorsement by
the University of California or its affiliates.
The opinions
expressed on this Weblog are the responsibility of the contributing
authors and do not reflect the opinion of the Institute of Industrial
Relations, The University of California, or the Regents of the
University of California
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Institute
of Industrial Relations Library
Labor and Employment Weblog
University of California, Berkeley |
Updated
5/24/2004; 11:10:30 AM
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Tuesday, May 18, 2004 |
Japanese truck maker prepares Arkansas site for parts plant. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - Toyota's Japanese truck-making partner said Tuesday it may add a truck assembly plant to a planned parts plant in Marion, where the company says it will break ground in July. Hino Motors Ltd. of Tokyo said it will open the parts plant at the 160-acre site in 2006 and consider a full truck-assembly plant there if its new American truck line does well enough. AP via Florida Times-Union May 18 2004 9:53PM GMT
4:47:21 PM
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Car plant closure in Australia to cost company $220m. MITSUBISHI Motors Australia will have to pay about $50million in employee entitlements and another $170 million in superannuation if it quits its two Adelaide factories. The 3500 employees of the plants in the southern suburbs will discover their fate on Friday, with the parent company confirming yesterday it would be revealing its long-awaited business plan in Tokyo then. news.com.au May 18 2004 10:09PM GMT
4:45:20 PM
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Oakland's unemployment rate drops. OAKLAND -- The city's unemployment rate fell to 9 percent in April from 9.9 percent in March, the largest single monthly decline in at least 14 years. Oakland's jobless rate was 10.7 percent last April and peaked at 11.6 percent in July, according to the state Employment Development Department. Oakland Tribune May 18 2004 12:18PM GMT
4:34:02 PM
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Jobs going offshore faster than estimated. New figures on offshore outsourcing suggest that American companies are sending even more white-collar jobs to low-wage countries such as India, China and Russia than researchers originally estimated. Roughly 830,000 U.S. service-sector jobs — ranging from telemarketers and accountants to software engineers and chief technology officers — will move abroad by the end of 2005, according to a report released Monday by Forrester Research Inc. The Cambridge, Mass.-based firm projected in 2002 that 588,000 jobs would move overseas by the end of next year. Pioneer Planet May 18 2004 2:10PM GMT
4:14:12 PM
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Copyright
2004
Janice Kimball
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