In 2007, he and Ajit Zacharias proposed a schema on the inequality of employment.[5]
In a 2010 report by economist Richard Vedder and colleagues, Wolff is described as one of few academic scholars who have spoken out against problems in academia that have led to increasing number of college graduates being underemployed.[6]
Editorial work
Edward Wolff is serving as an Associate Editor of the Structural Change and Economic Dynamics since 1989[7] and in the past held a position of a managing editor of the Review of Income and Wealth.[3]
Publications
Edward Wolff is an author of numerous books, including:[3]
Growth, Accumulation, and Unproductive Activity: An Analysis of the Postwar US Economy (Cambridge University Press, 1987)
Productivity and American Leadership: The Long View (with W. J. Baumol and S. B. Blackman; The MIT Press, 1989)
Competitiveness, Convergence, and International Specialization (with D. Dollar; The MIT Press, 1993)
Top Heavy: A Study of the Increasing Inequality of Wealth in America (Twentieth Century Fund Press, 1995)
Retirement Insecurity: The Income Shortfalls Awaiting the Soon-to-Retire (Economic Policy Institute, 2002)
Downsizing in America: Reality, Causes, and Consequences (with W. J. Baumol and A. S. Blinder; Russell Sage Foundation, 2003)
Retirement Income: The Crucial Role of Social Security (with C. Weller; Economic Policy Institute, 2005)
Does Education Really Help? Skill, Work, and Inequality (Oxford University Press, 2006)
The Transformation of the American Pension System: Was It Beneficial for Workers? (W. E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, 2011)
Productivity Growth: Industries, Spillovers and Economic Performance (with T. ten Raa; Edward Elgar Publishers, 2012)
Productivity Convergence: Theory and Evidence, Cambridge Surveys of Economic Literature Series (Cambridge University Press, 2014)
Inheriting Wealth in America: Future Boom or Bust? (Oxford University Press, 2015)
A Century of Wealth in America (The Belknap Press of Harvard University, 2017)
^Wolff, Edward; Zacharias, Ajit, Class Structure and Economic Inequality (January 2007). Levy Economics Institute Working Paper No. 487. SSRN956092doi:10.2139/ssrn.956092.
^Vedder, Richard, et al. (2010) "From Wall Street to Wal Mart: Why College Graduates are Underemployed." Center for College Affordability and Productivity, 16 December 2010.