This is would reduce the number
of unemployed workers by 6 percent, and the lower the overall unemployment rate from 10 percent to 9.4 percent.
Not exact matches
But closing down unnecessary capacity can pay for itself, even if
unemployed workers are temporarily put on the government payroll (causing debt to rise, but usually
by less than it had before), but only temporarily as Beijing takes other measures to boost household income through wealth transfers from the state and so to boost consumption, a form
of demand which is likely to be more labor intensive than the demand created in the process
of over-capacity.
More sustainable demand (in the form
of needed infrastructure or
of higher consumption
by wealthier
workers) will lead to more productive investment
by redeploying underutilized resources, including
unemployed workers.
By contrast, Jack Mintz (another opponent
of greater EI accessibility) notes that in 2007 some 100,000
unemployed workers who otherwise would have qualified for EI benefits were excluded for lack
of hours.
By January, that proportion was down to below 46 % (i.e. 698,800 EI beneficiaries out
of 1,531,700
unemployed workers).
If
workers could be made better off
by accepting reduced wages instead
of being
unemployed, why isn't it happening?
I'll be speaking at the second one, at 10:45 in the same room, along with the national leaders
of NUPGE (representing provincial
workers) and CUPE (representing municipal
workers) about the contribution
of public
workers to greater equality
by improving the lives
of marginalized Canadians — the
unemployed, the homeless, single parents, recent immigrants, senior citizens, and others.
During 2011 as a whole, the number
of EI recipients fell
by 109,350 while the number
of unemployed workers declined
by just 11,700.
Those who defend the right to life
of the weakest among us must be equally visible in support
of the quality
of life
of the powerless among us: the old and the young, the hungry and the homeless, the undocumented immigrant and the
unemployed worker... Consistency means we can't have it both ways» (quoted
by Mark Shield on CNN.com, May 7).
In short, it seems that most
of the real gains from nationalization can be achieved
by government regulations that safeguard the safety and health
of workers, insure that they are taken care
of when they are
unemployed and when they retire, and allow them to organize to promote their own interests.
But the question that needs to be asked is, how many
of those stay - at - home dads actively chose that role and how many were forced into it
by the economic recession, the «
unemployed job - seekers, the underemployed, and discouraged
workers»?
If today's disgruntled
workers take negotiations to breaking point, they do so knowing full well that proprietors can replace them
by machines or
by other
unemployed workers who fill the ranks
of the so - called industrial reserve army.
Labor market studies
of the Buffalo - Niagara region indicate that 20 %
of the total current jobs in the market (137,000 jobs) will be impacted
by retirements in the next 10 years, affecting $ 6.9 billion in wages, but there currently are not enough
unemployed and emerging
workers to fill those jobs.
Gordon Brown promised yesterday to launch a drive to train thousands
of unemployed workers for jobs currently being filled
by immigrants flocking to Britain.
Congress as well came in for criticism from a breakout panel focusing on Workforce Investment Boards, local committees
of government and industry representatives established to help train
unemployed workers, especially those displaced
by the structural changes outlined
by Groshen.
An
unemployed construction
worker willing to do anything to get his preteen son Connor (Noah Lomax) and weathered, resilient mom Lynn (Laura Dern, currently the go - to actress for weathered, resilient moms) out
of a rough downtown motel heavily populated with other foreclosed families, Nash reluctantly accepts Carver's offer
of piecemeal employment, cleaning and repairing houses recently seized
by his unlikely new benefactor.
Directors: Jean Renoir, Jacques Becker, André Zwoboda, Jean - Paul le Chanois, dit Dreyfus, Jacques Brunius, André Swoboda, Henri Cartier - Bresson, Pierre Unik, Maurice Lime Screenplay: Jean Renoir, Paul Vaillant - Couturier, Jean - Paul Dreyfus, Pierre Unik; (the content
of one scene suggests that Ilya Ehrenburg, the Izvetsia correspondent in Paris throughout the 1930s, may have had an input) Photography: Louis Page, Jean - Serge Bourgoin, Jean Isnard, Alain Douarinou, Claude Renoir Jr., Nicholas Hayer (and, according to various sources, Marcel Carné and Henri Cartier - Bresson) Music: «Internationale», «Song
of the Komsomols»
by Shostakovitch, «Auprès de ma blonde», «La Cucaracha» sung
by Chorale Populaire de Paris, directed
by Suzanna Conte Sound: Robert Teisseire Editor: Marguerite Renoir Cast: Jean Dasté (teacher), Jacques Brunius (President
of the Administrative Council), Pierre Unik (Marcel Cachin» s secretary), Julien Bertheau (René, a young
worker), Nadia Sibirskaia (Ninette), Emile Drain (Gustave), Gaston Modot (Philippe), Charles Blavette (Tonin), Max Dalban (Foreman), Madeleine Solange (factory
worker), Jacques Becker (
unemployed worker), Jean Renoir, Sylvain Itkine, Jean - Paul Dreyfus, Léon Larive, Roger Blin, Vladimir Sokoloff, and (as themselves) Marcel Cachin, André Marty, Maurice Thorez, Jacques Duclos, Paul Vaillant - Couturier.
Among the book's more «robust» conclusions, to use the economists» term, is that the high Swedish expenditure on adult education (which is very well developed in Sweden, as a resource for
unemployed workers and as a way
of upgrading or changing one's credentials) is not warranted
by its returns: But how could it be, when, we learn, «individuals received student pay [all students are paid in Sweden — part
of the commitment to equality] at the level
of unemployment benefits, which in Sweden replace up to 80 percent
of forgone earnings.»
LOUISVILLE — The push to return
unemployed workers to the nation's payrolls is hamstrung
by a decades - old legacy
of poor schooling that has left tens
of millions
of Americans without...
«Our dear little Norvelt was founded
by Eleanor Roosevelt, who knew common people like us wanted equality...» The town
of Norvelt, Pennsylvania, one
of 99 subsistence homestead communities created during the Depression for
unemployed workers, is a character in Jack Gantos's Dead End in Norvelt.
By allowing
unemployed or seasonal
workers access to equity on property they own, private lenders give people
of Sault Ste. Marie, a rare chance to actualize their dreams.
Because the hungry pets
of the homeless are being joined more and more
by the hungry pets
of people who simply are having trouble making ends meet... middle - class folks pummeled
by the economy, white - collar
workers recently laid off; the
unemployed, the underemployed, single parents, heroic victims
of domestic violence, proud war veterans, the disabled, fixed income seniors and more.
Misled
by fears
of an unfunded liability, the NDP government which followed began cutting cost
of living adjustments under the Friedland formula (Bill 165) though did increase pension supplements for
unemployed injured
workers.
Still, you'll feel amazed
by knowing the number
of unemployed workers in the United States.