Employment
in sentence
3253 examples of Employment in a sentence
The US is experiencing somewhat higher inflation than the eurozone and Japan are, and the Fed has a dual mandate: not just price stability, but also full
employment.
Now Germany is practically at full employment, but wages are not increasing at much more than 2% – far lower than the 5% rate that prevailed when Germany last had such low unemployment (below 4%), nearly 30 years ago.
Hundreds of thousand of people who would doubtless obtain
employment
in new private firms also do not have the slightest idea in advance that the would do so.
In this way, they have transformed the typical job search, and are now approaching the critical mass needed to move
employment
numbers.
This dynamic could be especially important in Europe, where
employment
prospects differ radically across countries (and across regions within countries), and many feel trapped in stagnant local economies.
Job seekers can augment their educational credentials and
employment
histories with samples of their work and endorsements from co-workers and customers, thereby conveying their potential value to employers more effectively.
Largely for that reason, China’s
employment
trends have held up much better than might be expected in the face of an economic slowdown.
New and expanding cities sustain growth through services-based employment, which in turn boosts consumer purchasing power by trebling per capita income relative to that earned in the countryside.
In the short to medium run, fiscal consolidation – whether in the form of cutting government spending or increasing revenues – results in lower output and employment, which means lower tax collection, higher deficits, and escalating debt relative to GDP.
It follows, then, that the right to equality could be violated even where another legal right – to, say, housing or
employment
– does not exist.
In the short term, Palestine needs more water to provide
employment
and income from farming; in the longer term, educational, cultural, and political changes are needed in order to develop a capacity to adapt.
But efforts to reform the system have been met with strong resistance, especially from local governments and residents, who fear the strain that unregulated migration to their cities will have on resources, employment, and services.
Returns from land-use projects, for example, could also include the potential to create more sustainable rural livelihoods, enable higher and more resilient agricultural yields, and generate rural
employment.
What many analysts still see as a temporary bubble, pumped up by artificial and unsustainable monetary stimulus, is maturing into a structural expansion of economic activity, profits, and
employment
that probably has many more years to run.
First, China’s growth model is distorted, as it emphasizes investment over
employment
growth and depends partly on wage suppression to subsidize production and exports.
The most important lesson pertains to traction — the link between Fed policy and its congressionally mandated objectives of maximum
employment
and price stability.
Other sectors that currently account for a large share of
employment
in lower-income countries – including apparel, light manufacturing, logistics, and call centers – are forecast to undergo increasing automation.
The good news is that Latin America’s agendas for technology, productivity, and inclusivity overlap; for example, improvements in education and the encouragement of formal
employment
advance all three objectives.
The conservative media in the United States recently mocked President Barack Obama for suggesting that automation might hurt
employment
growth.
That leads to lower prices for the goods and services produced, which in turn leaves consumers with more money to spend on other things, boosting demand – and
employment
– across nearly all industries.
As more workers are automated out of more
employment
sectors, there must come a “tipping point,” beyond which the overall economy simply is not sufficiently labor-intensive to continue absorbing workers who lose their jobs due to automation (or globalization).
A survey of OECD countries shows that half the total population lives in cities of more than 500,000 inhabitants, and that cities have accounted for 60% of total growth of
employment
and GDP since 2001.
Second, cities should ensure that
employment
and entrepreneurship opportunities are available to all people, including women, young adults, immigrants, and disadvantaged populations.
Doing so would broaden discussions of macroeconomic policy to include
employment
issues – specifically, the potential impact of large foreign-trade surpluses on domestic jobs.
Moreover, there is no evidence that these programs generate major negative incentives, such as lower
employment
among adults or higher fertility rates.
Thus, a firm’s total global profits would be taxed according to factors such as sales, employment, and resource usage – all of which reflect real economic activity – in each jurisdiction.
In most poor countries, women are poorer than men, owing to the systematic discrimination that they face in education, health care, employment, and control of assets.
Faced with fewer traditional
employment
opportunities, many poor women have no choice but to go into business for themselves; to succeed, they need government support.
Finally, for many women, the biggest obstacle to
employment
is also one of the least discussed: transportation.
Politicians and lawyers may dislike this solution, because it undermines the EU's principle of social inclusion for
employment
and resembles arrangements that currently apply to EU citizens who live in other member countries without working there.
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