Abstract
From unemployment in the recent recession to the wage-push inflation, today's problems of labor economics are important economic issues. However, I note very few exciting academic discussions on these problems. It may be that researchers in labor economics have been too specialized to call forth controversies on common grounds, that economists' sense of mission to solve real and live problems has waned, or that the flood of information fed by computers and mass media has so overwhelmed them that they are at a loss to think by themselves.

This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit: