EMPLOYMENT
EMPLOYMENT
AND
UNEMPLOYMENT
Grade 10
Labour force – the working population of an economy, i.e. all people of working
age who are willing and able to work.
Dependent population – people not in the labour force and thus depend on the
labour force to supply them with goods and services to fulfill their needs and
wants. This includes students in education, retired people, stay-at-home parents,
prisoners or similar institutions as well as those choosing not to work.
Employment is defined as an engagement of a person in the labour force in
some occupation, business, trade, or profession.
Unemployment is a situation where people in the labour force are actively
looking for jobs but are currently unemployed.
All governments have a macroeconomic objective of maintaining a low
unemployment rate.
Full Employment is the situation where the entire labour force is employed.
That is, all the people who are able and willing to work are employed –
unemployment rate is 0%.
Changing patterns and level of employment
Over time, patterns and levels of employment change. It could be
due to the effects of the business cycle that every economy goes
through from time to time (growth and recession). It could be due
to the changes to the demographics (population- age and gender)
of the country. It could also be due to structural changes (dramatic
shifts in how an economy operates). Let’s look at some ways in
which this happens:
As an economy develops, it undergoes a structural change as output and employment
shifts from primary sector to manufacturing and then to the
tertiary (services) sectors. This can be seen in rapidly developing countries like India
where there employment in agriculture and allied industries are rapidly falling and
people are moving towards the fast-growing service sector, especially IT and retail.
In the same way, employment moves from the informal sector (formally
unrecognised trades such as street vending- output is not included in GDP and
incomes are not taxed) to the formal sector (recognised – included in GDP and taxes)
as economies develops. People who previously worked as street vendors may work in
registered firms, as the economy develops.
Overtime, as an economy develops, the labour force also sees an increase in the
proportion of female labour. As social attitudes become progressive and women are
encouraged to work, more women will enter the labour force and contribute to growth.
Similarly, as the country develops, the proportion of old people may increase in
proportion to young and working people (because death and birth rates fall). This will
cause the labour force to shrink and cause a huge burden on the economy. Japan is now
facing this problem as their birth rates are falling and it is up to a shrinking labour force
to support a growing dependent senior population.
Unemployment rate = number of people unemployed / total no. of people in the labour force
There are some problems with measuring employment.
Inactivity rates: the long-term unemployed may become discouraged and leave the
labour market completely. In effect they are not working, but they are classed as
economically inactive rather than unemployed. So, the unemployment rate can be
understated.
The causes/types of unemployment
•Frictional unemployment: this occurs as a result of workers leaving one job and
spending time looking for a new one. This type of unemployment is short-lived.
•Structural unemployment: this occurs due to the long-term change in the structure of an
economy. Workers end up having the wrong skills in the wrong place – causing them to be
unfit for employment. This can be explained by dividing it further:
•Seasonal unemployment: this occurs as a result of the demand for a product being
seasonal. For example, the demand for umbrellas will fall in non-monsoon seasons,
and so workers in umbrella manufacturing firms will become unemployed over those
seasons.
•Voluntary unemployment: when people choose not to work for various reasons –
they want to pursue higher education, would like to take a break etc. Because they’re
not actively looking for work, voluntarily unemployed people do not belong to the
labour force!
The consequences of unemployment
•People will lose their working skills if they remain unemployed for a long
time and may find it even harder to find suitable jobs. As people remain
unemployed, their incomes will be low, and living standards will fall.
•Unemployment will also lead to poverty, homelessness and ill health and
encourage people to steal and commit other crimes to make money– crime
rates will rise.
•People losing skills is not just detrimental to the unemployed individuals but
also to firms who may employ these people in the future. They will have
to retrain these workers.
•Firms will have to pay redundancy payments to workers they lay off.
•Workers will be demotivated as they fear they could lose their jobs, especially in a
recession.
•As firms lay off workers, they will be left with spare capacity- unutilised machinery,
tools and factory spaces, leading to higher average costs.
•Due to low incomes, people’s purchasing power/consumption will fall,
causing demand to fall.
•People will need to rely on charity or government unemployment benefits to support
themselves. These benefits are provided from tax revenue. But now, as incomes have
fallen tax revenue will also fall. This might mean that people remaining in work will
have to pay more of their income as tax, so that it can be distributed as unemployment
benefits to the unemployed. The burden on tax-payers will rise.
•Public expenditure on other projects such as schools, roads etc. will have to be cut
down to make way for benefits. There is opportunity cost involved here.
•The economy doesn’t reach its maximum productive capacity, i.e., they
are economically inefficient on the PPC. The economy loses output.
Policies to reduce unemployment
Both demand-side policies and supply-side policies help reduce unemployment. Demand-side policies will
address the unemployment caused by demand deficiency (cyclical) while the supply-side measures will curtail
structural and frictional unemployment.
•Control inflation: higher inflation causes firms to lay off workers to reduce
costs. So if the government tries to control inflation via monetary tools, it will
help reduce firm costs and increase employment. But there is also the argument
that as unemployment rises, incomes will also rise, driving up prices again.
•Remove labour market regulations: letting the market have a free hand in the labour
market – abolishing maximum working weeks, minimum wages, making it easier to hire
and fire workers – will improve the labour market flexibility, can improve imperfections
in the labour market. However, this can cause temporary unemployment and cause
greater job insecurity.