Employment
in sentence
3253 examples of Employment in a sentence
In Sweden, it amounts to 33.5% of “dependent employment” (total
employment
excluding the self-employed), and 32.9% in Denmark.
On average the share of state
employment
in the workforce across Scandinavia is 32.7%, compared to only 18.5% on average in the non-Scandinavian countries of the EU-15.
So the high share of government
employment
contributes to the region’s low unemployment rate.
Apart from the accounting trick implicit in Scandinavia’s success, the high share of government in
employment
may also make a real contribution to solving one of the most fundamental problems western economies now face.
The second option is to pay wage subsidies instead of wage replacement incomes to allow for the wage dispersion necessary for full
employment
without letting the incomes of the unskilled fall.
In Europe, the European Central Bank believes that the danger of uncontrolled inflation following a loss of public confidence in its commitment to low inflation outweighs the costs of European
employment
that is far too high.
But exposure to foreign television stations also means that many disillusioned Algerians are looking towards escape to Italy, France, or Germany as their only hope of
employment
and a decent life.
Hungary, Poland, Romania, and most other ex-communist nations have delayed privatizing medium and large enterprises until their government managers "restructured" employment, accounting practices, and the product mix.
In Latin America, that means an economist who worries about growth, employment, and exports, as well as about balancing the budget and paying debts.
At the same time, the private sector has taken off, and now accounts for two-thirds of China’s GDP and urban
employment.
Nonetheless, the ingredients of an effective strategy to spur economic growth and
employment
are similar: available balance sheets (sovereign and private) should be used to generate additional demand and boost public investment, even if it results in greater leverage.
Many officials (and the analysts and advisers who support them) assumed that this magic number represents the minimum rate needed to provide jobs to workers and managers and absorb the more than six million new graduates who spill out of China’s campuses each year in search of
employment.
Modular classrooms, which can be built quickly and inexpensively, could provide local
employment
and supplement existing school facilities.
Recently, the Fed expressed its intent to keep policy rates low for a long time – until
employment
picks up strongly.
He called his theory “general” to distinguish it from the pre-Keynesian theory, which assumed a unique level of output – full
employment.
And his challenge implied a new dimension to policymaking: Governments may need to run deficits to maintain full
employment.
Even those who insist that market economies gravitate toward full
employment
are forced to argue their case within the framework that Keynes created.
To control financial markets in the interests of full
employment
and social justice lies squarely in the Keynesian tradition.
Moreover, developing effective programs requires far more data about young people’s journey from education to
employment
than is currently available.
Little wonder, then, that half of them were not convinced that their post-secondary studies had improved their
employment
opportunities.
According to this view, relatively small increases in aggregate demand above levels consistent with full
employment
will have a substantial impact not just on inflation, but also on expectations of inflation.
I showed that, when the now-standard view about inflation was developed in the 1970s, increases in aggregate demand above levels consistent with full
employment
were actually few, short-lived, and small, and that past inflation jumps had been incorporated into future expectations not rapidly, but slowly over time.
According to this pseudo-historical retelling, Keynesian economists in the 1960s did not understand the natural rate of unemployment, so they persuaded central bankers and governments to run overly expansionary policies that pushed aggregate demand above levels consistent with full
employment.
To be sure, there are times when such wage increases can risk killing
employment.
But today is not one of those times: countries like the US, Japan, Germany, and the UK are at virtually full
employment.
In the US, low wages at the bottom end of the labor market have discouraged millions of working-age individuals from even seeking
employment.
These poorer outlying regions are hugely dependent on public-works projects for
employment.
There is far more job insecurity than ever before as firms increasingly offer temporary jobs in place of once-treasured “lifetime employment.”
It should be clear by now that excessive, front-loaded austerity measures tend to be self-defeating, because they trigger a downward spiral of output, employment, and tax revenues.
The ECB also claims that its bond purchases, after financial markets had already normalized, sparked economic growth and fostered
employment.
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