- Unemployment: failure to use unavailable resources, particularly labor to produce desired goods and services.
- population- total amount of people in a country.
- labor force- number of people in a country that is employed or unemployed.
- FORMULA: (unemployment rate/ unemployment rate + employment rate) X 100
- EMPLOYED:
- People who are 16 yrs of age and up with a job (full/part time)
- 1 hr every two weeks = employed
- UNEMPLOYED:
- People who are 16 yrs and up that don't have a job but are actively searching for a job within the last two weeks.
- NOT IN LABOR FORCE:
- Have kids
- full time student
- retirees
- disabled people
- homeworkers
- mentally institutionalized
- incarcerated
- military
- discouraged workers (people who look for a job, don't get it and stop trying)
TYPES OF UNEMPLOYMENT
- FRICTIONAL: Temporarily unavailable or "in between jobs." Workers are qualified and have transferable skills who are looking for a better opportunity. (ex. HS or college graduate)
- SEASONAL: Due to the time of the year and the nature of the job. (ex. life guard, mall Santa clause, Easter bunny, school bus driver, tourism, construction workers)
- STRUCTURAL: Changes in the structure of the labor force which makes some skills obsolete. Workers don't have transferable skills. (ex. VCR repair man, creative destruction- when a new job is created the old job gets destroyed)
- CYCLICAL: Unemployment that results in economic downturns such as recession. As demands for goods and services fall, demand for labor workers fall and workers will be laid off.
- Full employment or NRU (natural rate of unemployment)
[ FULL EMPLOYMENT MEANING THERE IS NO CYCLICAL UNEMPLOYMENT] - Okun's Law: For every 1% in which the actual unemployment rate exceeds the rate of unemployment, it causes a 2% decrease in real GDP.
- Rule of 70: Calculates the number of years that is required to double GDP.
ex. if the annual inflation rate is 2%, how long will it that for the GDP to double?70/2 =35 years, therefore it will take 35 years to double.
Your notes were simple and easy to understand, i love how you also incorporated examples to better understand each type of unemployment. I noticed that you did not put the formula for rate of unemployment, i hope you do so since it it crucial for calculations.
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