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This report provides projections of the supply and utilization of doctoral scientists and engineers (S/E) through 1987. The study, the fourth in a series that began in 1969, uses a new approach that explicitly incorporates the effect of the domestic market for highly trained S/E personnel upon the numbers of S/E doctorates awarded by American universities. In this improved approach, market conditions are assumed to affect the projected proportions of both S/E baccalaureates who enter graduate school and graduate enrollees who earn doctorates. The projected 1982 and 1987 supplies of doctorates in each broad S/E field are the summation of three components. The first is composed of those members of the 1977 doctoral labor force who are projected to be still employed at the later dates. The second component, about equal in size to the first, is doctorate recipients for 1977 through 1982 and 1983 through 1987. Before their inclusion in the projected supply, these estimates of future degree-recipients are adjusted to reflect the emigration of non-U.S. residents and any field-switching of the remaining new doctorates as they take their first jobs after graduation. The third, and smallest, component is the estimated number of future Ph.D. immigrants.
Since the 1960s the number of highly educated professionals in America has grown dramatically. During this time scholars and journalists have described the group as exercising increasing influence over cultural values and public affairs. The rise of this putative "new class" has been greeted with idealistic hope or ideological suspicion on both the right and the left. In an Age of Experts challenges these characterizations, showing that claims about the distinctive politics and values of the professional stratum have been overstated, and that the political preferences of professionals are much more closely linked to those of business owners and executives than has been commonly assumed.
This is a compendium and guide to statistics on just about everything in the United States. The section on "Business Enterprises" includes incorporations, failures, small business data, and tax returns. Among the several appendixes is a list of state statistical abstracts.