Unemployment

Unemployment
Each month, the federal government's Bureau of Labor Statistics randomly surveys sixty thousand individuals around the nation. If respondents say they are both out of work and seeking employment, they are counted as unemployed members of the labor force. Jobless respondents who have chosen not to continue looking for work are considered out of the labor force and therefore are not counted as unemployed.

Full Employment
Just as there is no regularity in the timing of business cycles, there is no reason why cycles have to occur at all. The prevailing view among economists is that there is a level of economic activity, often referred to as full employment, at which the economy theoretically could stay forever. Full employment refers to a level of production at which all the inputs to the production process are being used, but not so intensively that they wear out, break down, or insist on higher wages and more vacations. If nothing disturbs the economy, the full-employment level of output, which naturally tends to grow as the population increases and new technologies are discovered, can be maintained forever. There is no reason why a time of full employment has to give way to either a full-fledged boom or a recession.

Unemployment Insuranc
The United States unemployment insurance program is intended to offset income lost by workers who lose their jobs as a result of employer cutbacks. The program, launched by the Social Security Act of 1935, is the government's single most important source of assistance to the jobless.

A second goal of the program is to counter the negative impacts on the national economy, and especially on local economies, of major layoffs, seasonal cutbacks, or a recession. Unemployment benefits help sustain the level of income and hence the demand for goods and services in areas hard hit by unemployment. In short, unemployment insurance supports consumer buying power.

New Keynesian Economics
The primary disagreement between new classical and new Keynesian economists is over how quickly wages and prices adjust. New classical economists build their macroeconomic theories on the assumption that wages and prices are flexible. They believe that prices "clear" markets--balance supply and demand--by adjusting quickly. New Keynesian economists, however, believe that market-clearing models cannot explain short-run economic fluctuations, and so they advocate models with "sticky" wages and prices. New Keynesian theories rely on this stickiness of wages and prices to explain why involuntary unemployment exists and why monetary policy has such a strong influence on economic activity.
 
Unemployment is everywhere,there is no proper solution to eradicate it. Government should take appropriate steps towards it. I think main reason behind unemployment is population.
 
Unemployment is everywhere,there is no proper solution to eradicate it. Government should take appropriate steps towards it. I think main reason behind unemployment is population.

There's just too much competition and too less skilled workforce to deliver on the job. Automation in business processes and artificial intelligence replacing the need for human resource is another threat to employment rates.
 
There's just too much competition and too less skilled workforce to deliver on the job. Automation in business processes and artificial intelligence replacing the need for human resource is another threat to employment rates.

Yes you are right kartik.. most of the coalmines and firms replacing their labor by automation so less requirement for human means unemployment.
 
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