Unemployed
in sentence
431 examples of Unemployed in a sentence
There was no real plot to the story for a while, just a gentle, philosophical taxi driver named Phil (Timothy Spall) who has a dry love relationship with his partner (who works in a supermarket) Penny (Lesley Manville), their daughter Rachel (Alison Garland) is an elderly people's home cleaner, and their son son Rory (James Corden) is
unemployed
and aggressive.
TREES LOUNGE is a film about Tommy Basilio , an
unemployed
mechanic who spend most of his time drinking in a bar or snorting drugs .
When his mother tells the
unemployed
27 year old that she reads The Star tabloid because everything in the rag is true, I realized that Herlinger probably never had a chance.
Essential here, is to attract expatriate Afghans with skills and professional achievements to help in rebuilding the country by establishing small firms that will suck up the
unemployed.
If we push interest rates up, Greenspan thought, millions of Americans would become unemployed, to no one’s benefit.
Overwhelmingly, those who became and remained
unemployed
suffered the most.
Second, reintegrating the
unemployed
even into a smoothly functioning market economy would prove to be very difficult.
In the end, in the US, it was the approach of World War II and the associated demand for military goods that led private-sector employers to hire the long-term
unemployed
at wages they would accept.
But, even today, economists can provide no clear explanation of why the private sector could not find ways to employ the long-term
unemployed
in the near-decade from the winter of 1933 to full war mobilization.
At first, the long-term
unemployed
in the Great Depression searched eagerly and diligently for alternative sources of work.
After 12 months of continuous unemployment, the typical
unemployed
worker still searched for a job, but in a desultory fashion, without much hope.
This was the pattern of the long-term
unemployed
in the Great Depression.
It was also the pattern of the long-term
unemployed
in Western Europe at the end of the 1980s.
And, in a year or two, it will be the pattern again for the long-term
unemployed
in the North Atlantic region.
For example, the EU could create a training support scheme for
unemployed
young people, but make it contingent on the elimination of national policies that hinder youth employment.
Higher taxes at the top could generate revenues to finance needed public investment, and to provide some social protection for those at the bottom, including the
unemployed.
But now congressional Republicans are refusing to adapt the unemployment system to this reality; as Congress went into recess for the holidays, it gave the long-term
unemployed
the equivalent of a pink slip: as 2014 begins, the roughly 1.3 million Americans who lost their unemployment benefits at the end of December have been left to their own devices.
Unemployed
workers had to find jobs in new industries, which took more time and training.
Moreover, because health-care benefits are often tied to jobs, an
unemployed
worker also risks losing access to affordable health care.
Workers in Ohio whose wages have stagnated, or
unemployed
voters in Michigan whose jobs have migrated overseas, will consume information in a way that reflects their economic situation.
Such a reduction happens not only when unemployment goes up, but also when the number of those who do not participate in the labor force grows: students, retired people, the
unemployed
who are discouraged and stop looking for work and so abandon the labor force.
Considering that the Italian 58% includes the unemployed, only about half of Italians of working age are now working or even looking for work.
In the United States, some companies pay the
unemployed
to stand in line for free public tickets to congressional hearings.
But if we think that both objectives – efficiency and solidarity – should play some role, perhaps we should turn a blind eye to hiring the
unemployed
to stand in line in lieu of busy lawyers, so long as they do not corner all of the seats.
That is why one should look at the unemployment ratio – the percentage of the
unemployed
in the reference population – rather than at the unemployment rate.
The fact that youth unemployment is just a part of a larger problem leads to the real policy question: Why should officials spend limited time, energy, and public funding specifically on
unemployed
young people, rather than on all of the
unemployed?
Hundreds of thousands of refugees are unemployed, including the most highly skilled among them, whose qualifications are often not recognized.
But what of the
unemployed
who become locked into their societies?
Some European analysts predict that, over the longer term, greater stability will follow the political changes in the Maghreb, with perhaps more than a million
unemployed
Moroccan and Tunisian immigrants returning home if their countries’ economies improve.
If the Union decides, as it could, that all member states must provide public health care for all
unemployed
persons, it would be up to national parliaments, not 25 judges in Luxembourg, to determine how to address that objective.
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