Unemployment Flashcards
level of employment definition
the number of people who are willing and able to work (economically active) but cannot find work.
rate of unemployment definition
the percentage of the labour force out of work
governement objective
maintain full employment
full employment
a situation where those wanting and able to work can find employment at the going wage rate
6 major causes of unemployment
- cyclical unemployment
- structural unemployment
- frictional unemployment
- real-wage unemployment
- regional unemployment
- season unemployment
cyclical unemployment
Not enough demand for the specific job, and too many qualified. e.g. philosophy graduates
structural unemployment
reducing unemployment due to a long-run decline in industry demand
frictional unemployment
unemployment of people who have newly entered the job market from graduating, etc.
real-wage unemployment
when people who are actively seeking work are not willing to work for the wage offered
regional unemployment
when there is unemployment in a certain region through a mismatch between skills demanded and skills available. e.g. coal mining - south wales
season unemployment
when certain industries do not work at certain times of the year, as there is not enough demand. e.g. resorts
what is the labour force survey
survey of 60,000 households done 4 times a year. measured by analysis data from employers.
what is the claimant count
monthly count of people claiming unemployment related benefits.
to be considered unemployed
- out of work for more than 4 weeks
- able to start work in next 2 weeks
- available at least one hour a week
advantages of labour force survey
- includes groups excluded by claimant count
- included part time workers
- collects additional data & levels of skills
- widespread generalisable data