Employment
in sentence
3253 examples of Employment in a sentence
But if you're young, you're uneducated, you lack employment, you're black, and you're male, your life expectancy drops to less than 60 years old.
There's wonderful work that's happening that I've been involved with in Kingston, Jamaica and right here in Rio, which is putting education, employment, recreation up front for these high-risk groups, and as a result, we're seeing violence going down in their communities.
The problem here is that every area in blue on this map is somewhere where services are over 80 percent of
employment.
So 80 percent of the world's
employment
in the developed world is stuff that computers have just learned how to do.
And this is sometimes misinterpreted, but for full-time employment, a woman in the United States now gets 23 percent less than a man.
The government of Sweden, under its current feminist government, has committed to close both the
employment
and the pay gap for all of its citizens within the current electoral term.
It should have no exceptions for small businesses, length of
employment
or entrepreneurs.
The idea is for an economic zone, one in which we could potentially integrate the
employment
of refugees alongside the
employment
of Jordanian host nationals.
With a criminal record and without a job, Christopher would be unable to find employment, education or stable housing.
But it's also going to create new, flexible forms of
employment.
In mature economies, manufacturing will be back home, creating more employment, more productivity and more growth.
All right, so we're not finding steady employment, we're not earning as much money, and we're not living in big fancy houses.
A crisis of demographics, a crisis of education, a crisis of employment, a crisis of violence and a crisis for girls.
And young people are also telling me that they're worried about employment, that they won't be able to find a job.
We want every young person in school, learning, training, or age-appropriate
employment
by the year 2030.
Emma, like so many African-American women, sought better
employment
for her family and for others.
These facts, revealed in a recent book by Boston University economist James Bessen, raise an intriguing question: what are all those tellers doing, and why hasn't automation eliminated their
employment
by now?
ATMs, automated teller machines, had two countervailing effects on bank teller
employment.
In 1900, 40 percent of all US
employment
was on farms.
Employment
is robust in these jobs,
employment
growth.
Similarly,
employment
growth is robust in many low-skill, low-education jobs like food service, cleaning, security, home health aids.
Simultaneously,
employment
is shrinking in many middle-education, middle-wage, middle-class jobs, like blue-collar production and operative positions and white-collar clerical and sales positions.
The challenge that this phenomenon creates, what economists call
employment
polarization, is that it knocks out rungs in the economic ladder, shrinks the size of the middle class and threatens to make us a more stratified society.
If I were a farmer in Iowa in the year 1900, and an economist from the 21st century teleported down to my field and said, "Hey, guess what, farmer Autor, in the next hundred years, agricultural
employment
is going to fall from 40 percent of all jobs to two percent purely due to rising productivity.
But I hope I would have had the wisdom to say, "Wow, a 95 percent reduction in farm
employment
with no shortage of food.
So I went on and got a university degree, but I felt to be one step ahead of everyone for employment, I needed to have an advanced university degree, so I went ahead and got that.
In America, where you live determines your access to opportunities in education, in employment, in housing and even in access to medical care.
And in Atlanta, Georgia, Purpose Built Communities has dismantled the negative effects of segregation by transforming a crime-ridden, drug-infested public housing project into an oasis of mixed-income housing, of academic performance, of great community wellness and of full
employment.
If people had the right to decide how their information was shared, and more importantly, have legal redress if their information was misused against them, say to discriminate against them in an
employment
setting or in health care or education, this would go a long way to build trust.
CA: And what you're specifically looking for are investment proposals that create
employment
in the developing world.
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