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Unemployed.
No, the unemployed are not included in the labor force. The labor force consists of people who are either employed or actively seeking employment. Unemployed individuals who are not actively seeking employment are typically considered to be outside the labor force.
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To mimic the methods employed by other scientests.
Unemployed or out of work.
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You need to divide the unemployed by the TOTAL number of people (employed + unemployed). Then you can convert that number into a percentage.
still unemployed He is employed at WQAD News Channel 8 in Moline IL.
Yes. Just means that people are replacing others, so for every one unemployed, one is employed.Another answer:No. In the above case, the status (rate) would stay the same as 1 merely replaces the other, but the ratio of unemployed to the total available work force remains the same. For example, if you have 50 unemployed and 50 employed workers, the unemployment rate is 50%. 51 unemployed and 51 employed is still 50%. Adding one more worker (i.e. just graduated from school), and you still have 50 unemployed, but now there is 51 employed. The rate now changes from 50% unemployed to 49.5% unemployed, so the unemployment RATE decreased by adding the one employed person. You CAN have unemployed NUMBERS, but not rate, increase at the same time as the employed NUMBERS increase, however.
It leaves the employed people.
About one-fourth of alcoholics in America are unemployed, according to a study conducted by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. This suggests a higher rate of unemployment among individuals struggling with alcohol addiction compared to the general population.
Even though the homemaker is employed as a family unit, they are not part of the recognized work force, per se, and therefor are not part of the database of unemployed.