释义 |
Definition of full employment in English: full employmentnoun mass nounThe condition in which virtually all who are able and willing to work are employed. a target of full employment Example sentencesExamples - Sixty years ago, the Curtin and Chifley Governments set a great national goal for the attainment of full employment - jobs for all Australians.
- This opens the way for state intervention to regulate the level of effective demand to secure full employment.
- The economy remains close to full employment, says AIB, with the unemployment rate projected to fall to 4% by 2006.
- This boom will be constrained only by lack of workers, attributable directly to full employment in the economy, he said.
- Mass unemployment was replaced by virtually full employment.
- Nearly half of all single parents do not work, despite near full employment and a government target of getting 70% of them into jobs.
- He also thinks the city should become a big employer, guaranteeing full employment.
- If full employment is a desirable goal, then a policy of low real rates of interest ought to be followed.
- Until the 80's, New Zealand had pursued a policy of full employment, ensuring that there were jobs for all, even if it required spending money to do so.
- Up until 1984, we were a broadly social democratic nation, committed to full employment and a welfare state.
- So, the first thing that is needed is a vigorous strategy for pursuing full employment and eliminating poverty.
- ‘But we're virtually at full employment in this country now,’ he argues.
- Registered unemployment in the city is already below 5 per cent, suggesting virtual full employment.
- Growing our economy at a rate of 3.5 percent, creating just this year 750,000 new jobs, having on all border towns a figure close to full employment.
- Ten years on, a ‘remarkable turn-around’ has taken place with virtually full employment, companies all wanting to ‘hire not fire’.
- If you're interested in politics, you're interested in poverty, pensions, full employment and disability.
- Where once we expected full employment; now, despite the official statistics, we have 1.3 million people who cannot get the paid work they seek.
- Perhaps in an era of full employment the prospect of a generous lump sum and reasonable job opportunities still out there, the threat of no job is not so daunting.
- The findings of the job index are consistent with other indicators suggesting full employment which bring challenges despite a buoyant business environment.
- The answer is that full employment doesn't actually mean that everyone's employed.
Definition of full employment in US English: full employmentnoun The condition in which virtually all who are able and willing to work are employed. a target of full employment Example sentencesExamples - Registered unemployment in the city is already below 5 per cent, suggesting virtual full employment.
- Sixty years ago, the Curtin and Chifley Governments set a great national goal for the attainment of full employment - jobs for all Australians.
- The economy remains close to full employment, says AIB, with the unemployment rate projected to fall to 4% by 2006.
- This boom will be constrained only by lack of workers, attributable directly to full employment in the economy, he said.
- Nearly half of all single parents do not work, despite near full employment and a government target of getting 70% of them into jobs.
- So, the first thing that is needed is a vigorous strategy for pursuing full employment and eliminating poverty.
- If full employment is a desirable goal, then a policy of low real rates of interest ought to be followed.
- He also thinks the city should become a big employer, guaranteeing full employment.
- Mass unemployment was replaced by virtually full employment.
- Perhaps in an era of full employment the prospect of a generous lump sum and reasonable job opportunities still out there, the threat of no job is not so daunting.
- The findings of the job index are consistent with other indicators suggesting full employment which bring challenges despite a buoyant business environment.
- Until the 80's, New Zealand had pursued a policy of full employment, ensuring that there were jobs for all, even if it required spending money to do so.
- ‘But we're virtually at full employment in this country now,’ he argues.
- Growing our economy at a rate of 3.5 percent, creating just this year 750,000 new jobs, having on all border towns a figure close to full employment.
- Where once we expected full employment; now, despite the official statistics, we have 1.3 million people who cannot get the paid work they seek.
- The answer is that full employment doesn't actually mean that everyone's employed.
- Up until 1984, we were a broadly social democratic nation, committed to full employment and a welfare state.
- Ten years on, a ‘remarkable turn-around’ has taken place with virtually full employment, companies all wanting to ‘hire not fire’.
- This opens the way for state intervention to regulate the level of effective demand to secure full employment.
- If you're interested in politics, you're interested in poverty, pensions, full employment and disability.
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