A broader measure of unemployment

Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Print RSS Tweet This! Save this entry to my Favorites

The eminently readable Edmund Conway over at the Telegraph has written a blog post looking at a wider measure of unemployment than the published claimant count or labour force survey measure. This measure of unemployment includes: official unemployment, those classed as economically inactive who actually want a job and part time workers who would rather be working full time. The evidence is that this measure has grown by over 1.2million since the start of 2008 and is now pushing 5.7 million. Details here.

This is part of a wider debate about the scale of under-employment in modern economies and also the economic and social costs of deep-rooted, persistent unemployment and economic inactivity. 

Rate this article:   

Print RSS Tweet This!


ECONOMICS TEACHER RESOURCE NEWSLETTER

Join over 4,000 other Economics Teachers in the UK and around the world who receive the tutor2u Economics Resource Email newsletter. Get special offers, first news of latest resources, teaching ideas, conferences and workshops.

*  Your Email Address:
*  Preferred Format:
    AS/A2 Economics Board:
    GCSE Economics Board:
*  Country:
    Full Name:
    Job / Position:
    Postcode:
    School / College:
    Town / City:
*  Enter the security code shown:



Recent Threads on the Economics Teacher Discussion Forums:
Posts in: General Economics Teaching

Video Case-study - lunchtime prices slashed
Long Exam Example to Use for Revision Please?
Good hotel in London for school trip
Competitive Markets
Diminishing Returns
Complementary goods - HELP Please!
URgent Help Needed
Equilibrium concept
The price of life
Extended Project Qualification





Comments

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Smileys

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see below:


Most Popular Topic Tags on the Economics Blog

recession, demand, economics, price, unemployment, prices, inflation, investment, costs, profit, downturn, supply, trade, debt, employment, confidence, euro, gdp, competition, capacity, risk, production, china, oil, incentives, exports, expectations, housing, pay, manufacturing, sterling, food, profits, property, mortgage, tutor2u, globalisation, banks, revision, slowdown, borrowing, usa, retailers, emissions, deflation, airlines, innovation, dollar, supermarkets, entrepreneur, efficiency, monopsony, elasticity, aqa, welfare, consumption, economist, productivity, saving, google, keynes, wealth, opec, depression, moodle, depreciation, jobs, competitiveness, credit crunch, economic cycle, cars, externalities, stocks, infrastructure, environmental, strategy, tim harford, carbon, vle, monopoly, subsidy, evaluation, eu, management, losses, protectionism, inequality, spare capacity, environment, poverty, bank of england, budget deficit, construction, behavioural, wages, macroeconomics, carbon trading, steel, commodities, output gap, skills, japan, oligopoly, imports, currencies, bbc, stagflation, contestable, agflation, cpi, farming, newsnight, choices, regulation, survey, taxes, government failure, itunes, minimum wage, lse, climate change, paul mason, population, intervention, keynes society, aviation, amazon, fiscal stimulus, single market, pricing, dan ariely, cartel, nationalisation, pollution, eton college, interest rates, shareholder, london, rationality, redundancies, market failure, rpi, mpc, shipping, behavioural economics, germany, robert peston, india, rsa, reputation, currency, quantitative easing, facebook, income elasticity, current account, stakeholders, brazil, coffee, savings, microsoft, monetary policy, crowding out, barriers to entry, collapse, multiplier effect, suppliers, economies of scale, price discrimination, uk economy, development, quiz, apple, surplus, taxation, labour market, tesco, free, scrappage, behaviour, tragedy of the commons, opportunity cost, open source, vat, smoking, cost of living, poverty trap, merger, growth, speculation, edinburgh, discrimination, ownership, cost benefit analysis, northern rock, global, ireland, supply chain, oecd, shareholders, scarcity, balance of payments, petrol, liquidity, duopoly, etonomics, iphone, trade deficit, starbucks, happiness, budget, human capital, subsidies, capital, immigration, eurozone, takeover, ecb, paradox of thrift, exploitation, advertising, wiki, public sector, utility, wants, labour force survey, peter day, tax, brand, blog, poland, iceland, foreign exchange, recovery, indirect tax, european union, robert frank, roger bootle, ocr economics, heathrow, hbos, hotels, freight, creative destruction, federal reserve, kaletsky, price war, information failure, spain, crude oil,
All tags

Login to the tutor2u Moodle VLE

Get a daily email update of new resources on the Economics Blog

Discussion forums for Economics teachers

Follow tutor2u on Twitter

 Jim  | Geoff  | Others

Latest entries

Categories

Monthly Archives

Syndicate