Employment
in sentence
3253 examples of Employment in a sentence
Three years of 4% growth in an economy at full
employment
is asking for inflationary trouble.
That is not much of a problem for the US, but it definitely is in Europe where the strong dollar has worked as an
employment
program.
Though the easing of rules for hiring and firing workers has probably helped to boost
employment
in some countries, such as the UK, it may also be depressing real wages.
Demographic data don’t capture the on-the-ground reality of asylum systems on the brink of collapse or economies struggling to provide housing and
employment.
In other words, they obtained shorter hours (i.e., more vacations) in order to keep
employment
up.
Dynamic solidarity, in other words, means favoring policies that foster investment, innovation, economic growth, and
employment.
State institutions should deliver public goods (like defense, justice, and fiscal and monetary policy), society should deliver social goods (like culture, education, and assistance to needy people), and the market should deliver economic goods (which are connected with profits, growth, and employment).
Members of this cohort who are seeking full-time
employment
have typically completed upper secondary education, but have decided not to pursue university education (or have completed their university studies early).
In the decades following World War II, the doctrine that inflation needed to be traded off against
employment
– based on the relationship that William Phillips described in 1958 – dominated economic thinking.
If people do not expect inflation, the illusion of increased purchasing power can boost
employment
and output for a relatively short period.
In July, Bernanke attempted to calm investors with remarks signaling that, amid inadequate
employment
gains and persistently low inflation, the Fed would not abandon monetary stimulus anytime soon.
This stance reflects the Fed’s dual mandate, according to which monetary policy targets maximum
employment
consistent with price stability.
The Elusive Benefits of Flexible Exchange RatesCAMBRIDGE – In 1953, Milton Friedman published an essay called “The Case for Flexible Exchange Rates,” arguing that they cushion an economy from internal and external shocks by bringing about just the right price changes required to keep the economy at full
employment.
As America’s terms of trade (the ratio of export prices to import prices) deteriorate, demand is shifted toward US goods, keeping the economy at full
employment.
The result is the desired deterioration of the producer’s terms of trade and the maintenance of full
employment.
But, in a dollar-dominated trade environment, their ability to support full
employment
is severely limited.
Decent living conditions – including housing, nutrition, and health care – must be guaranteed, in addition to educational and
employment
opportunities.
And while women’s
employment
rates decreased as women left minimum-wage jobs, salaries, particularly for store clerks, rose sharply.
Unemployment has virtually disappeared; the
employment
rate continues to reach new highs; and disposable income per capita is rising steadily.
In fact, even during Japan’s so-called “lost decades,” per capita income grew by as much as it did in the United States and Europe, and the
employment
rate rose, suggesting that deflation may not be quite as nefarious as central bankers seem to believe.
Growth remains solid, if not spectacular, and
employment
is rising.
Furthermore, the only reason why unemployment remains high in the eurozone is that the labor-force participation rate has continued to increase throughout the recession; and, indeed,
employment
is returning to pre-crisis levels.
And there is little sign of inflationary pressure, even in the US, which is near “full”
employment.
The challenge is to apply these insights in a world characterized by global economic interdependence, major imbalances, and a worsening growth and
employment
problem.
It is a world in which economies are connected directly in the tradable sector of the global economy, and indirectly through the demand and
employment
linkages between the tradable and non-tradable sectors of individual economies.
The efficient integration of global supply chains has created
employment
opportunities in developing countries and in the higher value-added sectors of advanced countries.
But it has also reduced
employment
options for a subset of middle-income people in the tradable sectors of advanced economies.
Although Western tourism is a critically important source of
employment
and foreign currency in both countries, some Muslims have criticized the industry for promoting alcohol and other relaxed social conventions that threaten Islamic values.
The costs would include one-off expenses to migrants: transport, obtaining visas and permits, and finding housing, schooling, and employment, as well as the emotional cost of separation from family.
The investment boom has kept China’s urban
employment
growing strongly.
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