Unemployment Pendleton OR
Do what you can to overcome any adversity by arming yourself with knowledge. Learn how unemployment may affect you and how to cope with it. Here you will find unemployment information for people in Pendleton who are willing to work for pay but are unable to find jobs and or who are interested in business services, business intelligence, business advice, corporate development, and entrepreneur guidance for start ups.
Custer Lawrence R (503) 224-5220
Portland, OR
Bridge the Gap (503) 245-4138
2280 SW Vermont St Portland, OR
Excell Executive Leadership Exchange (503) 245-0950
6619 SW 88th Pl Portland, OR
Drake Beam Morin Inc (503) 205-4333
101 SW Main St Portland, OR
Cross Roads Inc (503) 589-1817
3000 Market St NE Ste 537 Salem, OR
Successworks (541) 354-2902
4261 Chamberlain Dr Hood River, OR
360 Networks (503) 293-8347
10260 SW Greenburg Rd Portland, OR
Core Business Services (541) 582-3687
599 E Main St Rogue River, OR
Small Business Development Center (541) 962-1532
1607 Gekeler Ln La Grande, OR
Ams Management Services (503) 581-0260
1284 32nd Ave NW Salem, OR
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In Economics, one who is willing and to work for pay yet is unable to find employment is considered unemployed. The unemployment rate is the number of unemployed workers divided by the total civilian labor force, which includes all those willing and able to work for pay – both unemployed and employed.
In practice, measuring the number of unemployed workers actually seeking work is notoriously difficult, particularly those whose unemployment benefits have expired before finding work. There are several different methods for measuring the number of unemployed workers, each with its own biases, making comparisons between methods difficult.
The terms unemployment an unemployed are sometimes used to refer to other inputs to production that are not being used fully – for example, unemployed capital goods.
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Some of the likely costs of unemployment for society include increased poverty, crime, political instability, mental health problems, and diminished issue in economics. A low rate of unemployment usually helps prevent mass poverty and violence.
Lacking a job in Pendleton often means lacking social contact as well, a purpose for many hours of the day, lack of self-esteem, mental stress and illness, and of course, the inability to pay bills and to purchase both necessities and luxuries. The latter is especially serious for those with family obligations, debts, and medical costs, where the availability of health insurance is often linked to holding a job. Increasing unemployment also raises the crime rate, the suicide rate, and encourages bad health. Because unemployment, insurance in the U.S. typically doesn’t even replace 50% of the income one received on the job, the unemployed often end up tapping welfare programs such as food stamps – or accumulating debt, both formal debt to banks and informal debt to friends and relatives. Higher government transfer payments in the form of welfare and food stamps decrease spending on productive economic goods, decreasing GDP.
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High unemployment implies low real Gross Domestic Product – human resources are not being used as completely as possible and are thus wasting opportunities to produce goods and services. The economic health and real wealth of nations is closely tied to what can be produced and sold.
Because the unemployed are lost from the world of production – called deficient-demand or cyclical unemployment – thus represents a profound form of inefficiency, sometimes called Keynesian inefficiency. Okun’s Law tells us that for the U.S., the economy misses out on about two percent of its potential output for each one percentage point of unemployment above the full employment, unemployment rate, or NAIRU. Alternatively, this law says that as unemployment rises by one percentage point, the percentage of potential output that could have been produced but was not rises by about two points.
Unemployed workers are lost from the producing world of work, but the reduction in their consumption also has a negative effect on the businesses they no longer patronize, and on the overall economy. One business’s employees are the next business’s customers. As workers reduce or increase spending, based on their present or expected earnings, the impact on the bottom line of the businesses they patronize is disproportionately greater. A large loss of jobs at one employer may reduces aggregate income and spending so that other businesses come to expect to sell fewer goods, prompting them to consider cutting production and reducing their own workforces. A spiraling circle of job cuts tends to cause or sharpen business panics. The task of predicting and moderating panics or recessions is made more difficult by the self-perpetuating negative feedback on the economy of the reduced spending of unemployed workers. The impact of unemployment of businesses is sharpened because the bottom line in business reflects the margin after variable and fixed costs are paid, so that the last lots of goods or services sold tend to be much more profitable than the first.
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