Employment and Unemployment Flashcards

1
Q

Claimant count

A

The number of people claiming unemployment-related benefits.

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2
Q

Cyclical unemployment

A

Unemployment caused by a persistent lack of aggregate demand for goods and services, where national output < potential output leading to a negative output gap.

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3
Q

Demand deficient unemployment

A

Also known as cyclical unemployment, occurs when planned demand is insufficient to generate a full-employment level of real national output, this is most likely to happen in a slowdown or recession.

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4
Q

Discouraged workers

A

People often out of work for a long time who give up on job search and who become economically inactive in the labour market. A cause of hidden unemployment.

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5
Q

Disguised unemployment

A

Also known as hidden unemployment, where part of the labour force is either left without work or is working in a redundant manner where worker productivity is essentially zero.

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6
Q

Economically active

A

Those who are unemployed and actively seeking employment.

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7
Q

Economically inactive

A

Those who are of working age but are neither in work nor actively seeking work.

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8
Q

Frictional unemployment

A

Those moving between jobs. Typically lasts for up to six months.

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9
Q

Full employment

A

When there enough job vacancies for all the unemployed to take work.

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10
Q

Human capital

A

Human capital is a measure of individuals’ skills, knowledge, abilities, social attributes, personalities and health attributes. These factors enable individuals to work, and therefore produce something of economic value.

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11
Q

Inactivity

A

The state of not producing an economic output.

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12
Q

International labour organisation (ILO)

A

The ILO is a United Nations agency whose mandate is to advance social justice and promote decent work by setting international labour standards.

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13
Q

Job search

A

Process by which workers find appropriate jobs given their tastes and skills.

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14
Q

Labour force survey

A

The Labour Force Survey (LFS) is a study of the employment circumstances of the UK population. It is the largest household study in the UK and provides the official measures of employment and unemployment.

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15
Q

Labour shortages

A

When businesses find it difficult to recruit the skilled workers they need.

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16
Q

Labour supply

A

The number of people able, available and willing to work at prevailing wage rates.

17
Q

Migration

A

The movement of people from one geographical location to another with the intention of settling in the new region.

18
Q

Natural rate of unemployment

A

The equilibrium rate of unemployment = frictional + structural unemployment.

19
Q

NEETs

A

‘NEET’ stands for young people aged 16-24 Not in Education, Employment or Training (NEET). 788,000 people aged 16-24 in the UK were NEETs in 2019, representing 11.3% of the age group.

20
Q

Net inward migration

A

When the number of migrants coming into a country is higher than those leaving in a given time period – usually a year.

21
Q

Real wage

A

Nominal wage adjusted for the effects of inflation.

22
Q

Redundancy

A

Making someone redundant is to end their paid employment.

23
Q

Seasonal unemployment

A

This occurs when people are unemployed at particular times of the year when demand for labour is lower than usual.

24
Q

Structural unemployment

A

Unemployment that results from the decline in an industry which leaves people unemployed because they do not have the skills needed by industries that are growing.

25
Q

Tight labour market

A

When demand for labour is high and there are shortages of labour. Businesses may have to offer higher wages to attract and keep the workers they need.

26
Q

Under-employment

A

Workers are underemployed when they are willing to supply more hours of work than their employers are prepared to offer.

27
Q

Unemployment rate

A

The unemployment rate is the proportion of the economically active population who are unemployed.

28
Q

Unemployment trap

A

When the prospect of the loss of unemployment benefits dissuades those without work from taking a new job – creates a disincentives problem.

29
Q

Unit wage costs

A

Labour costs per unit of output.

30
Q

Zero hour contracts

A

An employment contract under which the employee is not guaranteed work and is paid only for work carried out.