October 2, 2007
Noon - 1:30 p.m.
Urban Institute
2100 M Street N.W., 5th Floor
Washington, D.C.
Seven million men and women (1 in 20 adult workers) earn low wages and live in low-income families with children. Many struggle to support their families with jobs that offer few benefits, opportunities for advancement, or links to government support programs. Meanwhile, employers are hard-pressed to balance their financial and productivity objectives in an increasingly global, competitive market. Panelists discussed what is missing from the debate about improving the income, benefits, and related work supports for low-wage workers, especially those with children.
Welcome |

| Margaret Simms, Urban Institute |
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Opening Remarks / Overview |

| Harry J. Holzer, Georgetown University and Urban Institute |
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Presentations |

| Beth Shulman, author, The Betrayal of Work: How Low-Wage Jobs Fail 30 Million Americans |

| Samuel Leiken, senior director of policy studies, Council on Competitiveness |

| Elizabeth Lower-Basch, senior workforce policy analyst, Center for Law and Social Policy |

| Linda Blumberg, principal research associate, Health Policy Center, Urban Institute |

| Question and answer session |
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Complete Recording |

| Download the complete recording here. |
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