1930s
Massive unemployment will shift the PPC to the left because labour force remains underutilized. The economy will produce inside the PPC indicating underutilization of resources.
Probably not as this would lead to massive unemployment and the inevitable war.
false
false
The Great Depression had a devastating effect on Australia with massive unemployment and hardship for most of the country.
This depends on the country you're living in. If you are referring to the United States, one of the major reasons why the unemployment benefits have been cut is due to what is now known as the budget crisis. The United States has been spending trillions of dollars it does not technically have and now has massive, crippling debt. The Government is starting to realize the dire situation, and is taking action to cut spending. Unfortunately, the bulk of the Government's spending comes from social programs, like welfare and unemployment. These two areas will continue to see massive cuts to balance the nation's checkbook.
Inflation went down due to spending cuts, but unemployment remained high under Ford's economic policy.
At this time, England was experiencing the industrial revolution, a period of massive industrialisation and high unemployment.
Egypt has massive overpopulation, high levels of corruption (preventing people from starting businesses), massive decreases in tourism (which was a primary industry in the country), and a government both financially and mentally incompetent at building domestic industry.
One can file for unemployment any time they are laid off, furloughed, or terminated from an employer covered by unemployment insurance. Whether that person receives unemployment benefits or not is dependent on the the conditions of separation, federal, state and local law, and sometimes the outcome of an appeals process, or special circumstances that temporarily alter benefit eligibility. Such circumstances may be a decree from the President or Governor due to widespread economic hardship, or massive layoffs from a key employer.
A program is something which delivers a massive piece of functionality (like say Terminal 5 at Heathrow Airport). Within this program will be a large number of individual projects each of which will deliver a specific piece of the functionality. When all these projects have delivered, all their pieces will make the big deliverable. The art of the Program Manager is to make all the individual projects come together at times to suit each other, and also to meet the big deliverable. Imagine how complex this will have been on the Terminal 5 program!
thousands in the major market programs (CBS, ABC, NBC national shows). Many more in independent/ local networks. A massive workforce (note that a small percent would work on "major programs")