Unemployment vs Worklessness - What's the difference?
unemployment | worklessness |
The state of having no job; joblessness.
The phenomenon of joblessness in an economy.
The level of joblessness in an economy, often measured as a percentage of the workforce.
(countable) A type of joblessness due to a particular economic mechanism.
(countable) An instance or period of joblessness.
(British) Unemployment; the state of being without paid work
*{{quote-news, year=2009, date=January 16, author=Libby Brooks, title=Generation Crunch need more than just McJobs, work=The Guardian
, passage=The majority come from circumstances where worklessness is embedded, and placements need to incorporate some element of mentoring if these individuals are to develop the life skills necessary to sustain a career. }}
As nouns the difference between unemployment and worklessness
is that unemployment is the state of having no job; joblessness while worklessness is (british) unemployment; the state of being without paid work.unemployment
English
Noun
(IPA: /?n.?m?pl??.m?nt /)- Unemployment made Jack depressed.
- Unemployment has been considered a cause of crime.
- Unemployment was reported at 5.2% in May, up from 4.9% in April.
- All unemployments , seasonal, frictional, cyclical, classical, whatever, mean that you're out of work.
- Until them his life had consisted of low-paying jobs, numberous unemployments , and drug use.
Synonyms
* joblessness, worklessness, unworkAntonyms
* employmentworklessness
English
Noun
(-)citation