View example sentences and word forms for Joblessness.
Joblessness
Joblessness meaning
The state of being jobless or unemployed. | The phenomenon or level of unemployment in an economy.
Example sentences (20)
Any ardent BJP supporter can give you arguments on why the rise in fuel prices, or joblessness are justified, as well as how Modi has raised India’s stature in the world.
By 1914, in Hilo, for example, joblessness was rampant.
China abruptly said it would stop publishing age-related employment data, prompting public scepticism and concern over youth joblessness.
Experts say a prolonged debt crisis could permanently prevent countries like Zambia from recovering, leading to an entire nation sliding deeper into poverty and joblessness, and exclude it from credit to rebuild in the future.
He said there is a palpable economic crisis brewing - joblessness among the youth, unbearable price rise, severe farm distress, and a complete corporate capture of the country's wealth.
Most Americans expected rising joblessness, high inflation, higher taxes, and a falling stock market.
That’s how high joblessness jumped at the worst point in the 2009 recession, and inflation came down by about two percentage points, he noted.
But the U.S. economy actually still looks fine: Joblessness is at 4.3 percent, which is only bad by comparison to 3.4 percent, where it stood in early 2023.
Investigators found out that he had decided to end his life as he was unable to feed his mother due to poverty and joblessness.
Joblessness spiked at 14.8 percent in April 2020 as the coronavirus pandemic shut down the US.
No matter the math, California joblessness is not just about big losses of late in the tech industry.
Often, just a little bit of help could keep us from falling into homelessness, joblessness, or worse.
Yes, that’s up from 4.2 percent in 2022, but did you know joblessness averaged 7 percent statewide during the previous three decades?
Although India is likely to escape a recession, Barclays said, such a significant slowdown would mean rising joblessness in a country where millions of young people enter the work force every year.
As cases increase at an alarming rate in much of the United States, the reliance on an overwhelmed unemployment system — the next infusion of money perpetually subject to the — leaves Americans uniquely exposed to a deepening crisis of joblessness.
As the coronavirus has sent economies into lockdown, sowing joblessness, people accustomed to taking care of relatives at home have lost their paychecks, forcing some to depend on those who have depended on them.
But many economists project more than a year of widespread joblessness, said Jed Kolko, an economist at Indeed.
But the Bank of England still sees joblessness reaching 7.5% this year, almost double the current level, and warns the labor market poses the biggest risk to any economic recovery.
But the decline in joblessness among Black people in Trump’s first years continued a years-long trend begun during the Obama administration.
By contrast, data in Sweden, which adopted much lighter virus restrictions than the rest of Europe, will reveal whether the trend of decreasing joblessness will continue.