Matching Items (8)
Filtering by
- All Subjects: Popular music--To 1901
- All Subjects: Wages--High technology industries employees
- Creators: Von Tilzer, Harry, 1872-1946
ContributorsVon Tilzer, Harry, 1872-1946 (Composer) / Sterling, Andrew B., 1874-1955 (Lyricist) / Shapiro, Bernstein & Co. (Publisher)
Created1901
ContributorsVon Tilzer, Harry, 1872-1946 (Composer) / Graham, Howard (Lyricist) / Shapiro, Bernstein & Co. (Publisher)
Created1900
ContributorsVon Tilzer, Harry, 1872-1946 (Composer) / Trevelyan, Arthur (Lyricist) / Shapiro, Bernstein & Co. (Publisher)
Created1900
ContributorsVon Tilzer, Harry, 1872-1946 (Composer) / Sterling, Andrew B., 1874-1955 (Lyricist) / Orphean Music Publishing Co. (Publisher)
Created1898
ContributorsVon Tilzer, Harry, 1872-1946 (Composer) / Lamb, Arthur J., 1870-1928 (Lyricist) / Shapiro, Bernstein & Co. (Publisher)
Created1900
ContributorsVon Tilzer, Harry, 1872-1946 (Composer) / Sterling, Andrew B., 1874-1955 (Lyricist) / Shapiro, Bernstein & Co. (Publisher)
Created1900
ContributorsVon Tilzer, Harry, 1872-1946 (Composer) / Trevelyan, Arthur (Lyricist) / Shapiro, Bernstein & Co. (Publisher)
Created1900
ContributorsRex, Tom R. (Author) / Battelle Memorial Institute. Technology Partnership Practice (Publisher)
Created2006-05
Description
Arizona is one of the states in which the high-wage end of the employment distribution provides a more favorable impression of its job quality than that based on all employment. Thus, Arizona’s subpar job quality is not due to a scarcity of high-wage jobs, but instead results from lesser job quality in the remainder of the employment distribution. In particular, Arizona has an above-average share of very low-paying jobs that serve tourists and seasonal residents. In turn, the low overall average wage in Arizona — 7 percent less than the U.S. average — primarily results from factors other than job quality. The average wage in Arizona is less than the U.S. average in the vast majority of industries and occupations, both high- and low-paying.