Job Quality Measurement Initiative & Good Jobs Initiative - U.S. Department of Labor Collaborative

Last Updated: 03/10/2024

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Overview

In April 2022, the Families and Workers Fund launched the Job Quality Measurement Initiative (JQMI) with the U.S. Department of Labor.  The collaboration is supporting better measurement of the quality of American jobs. This effort is based in the recognition that to date, the U.S. has primarily measured how many jobs the economy creates — not whether those jobs provide equitable career pathways for the people in these jobs. Good jobs are defined as those that provide family-sustaining pay, adequate benefits, and equal access to opportunity.

The Job Quality Measurement Initiative is analyzing current data and measurement systems and releasing recommendations for improving the country’s job quality data infrastructure.

The initiative has comprised a network of nearly 70 researchers and data experts and is drawing on guidance from leaders in business, labor, workforce development, and policy to help strengthen and catalyze job quality measurement. The Network meets to share ideas and examine questions to strengthen data collection, analysis, and utilization. An example of questions:

  • What if monthly jobs statistics told us not just how many workers are employed, but whether their jobs offer stable hours, opportunities for advancement, and family-sustaining pay?
  • What if investors had more thorough job quality data to assess companies’ long-term value and vulnerabilities?

Areas of attention include:

  • Administrative Data
  • Commercial/Employer Data
  • Performance Data
  • Federal Statistical Data:

This collaboration builds on the continuing work of the Good Jobs Initiative at the U.S. Department of Labor, which, along with the U.S. Department of Commerce, has released a framework of eight Good Jobs Principles. Working with over a hundred experts, the Job Quality Measurement Initiative released a report documenting ten big ideas to better measure job quality:

  1. Measure what matters to workers.
  2. Center equity in measurement.
  3. Increase mandatory human capital disclosure.
  4. Link public and private data to gain new insights into the quality of good jobs.
  5. Leverage business data to demonstrate the return on investment from good jobs.
  6. Revise data systems to include non-W2 workforce.
  7. Strengthen workforce system metrics.
  8. Use public and private spending to measure and strengthen equity and good jobs.
  9. Strengthen state and local capacity of data-driven decision-making.
  10. Invest in strengthening job quality measurement.

The Department of Labor is working to implement these recommendations. Examples:

  • The DOL is entering into data-sharing agreements with states to better understand equity in the Unemployment Insurance program, and to measure more accurately who is served and who is not.
  • The Good Jobs Initiative is releasing a Toolkit and providing resources on how to embed strong job quality policies and measure Good Jobs funded by federal dollars.
  • The DOL is participating in the Equity in Federal Funding Interagency Working Group, which is conducting rapid equity assessments to inform program design and delivery of federal funding.
  • The JQMI will continue to do important work, including measuring workers' voices and creating a scorecard to measure if employers are succeeding in creating good jobs.

Partners

Omidyar Network, Lumina Foundation, Irvine Foundation, Ford Foundation.

Resources

A New Collaboration Helped us Improve our Job Quality Measurement and Promote Good Jobs for All | U.S. Department of Labor Blog (dol.gov)

https://familiesandworkers.org/news/families-and-workers-fund-launches-collaboration-with-the-u-s-department-of-labor-to-measure-and-support-good-jobs%EF%BF%BC/#:~:text=The%20Families%20and,University%20of%20Chicago

A New Paradigm for Measuring Job Quality in 2022 [Report] (humanresourcewebinars.com)

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