Utopia Unemployment

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The thought of perfection is pleasing, but impossible to accomplish because in reality what does perfection mean. Not everyone has the same definition of perfection; some may define free education perfect while others think charging for education is perfect. In Thomas More imagined Utopia unemployment was solved because everyone had a job in agriculture. This provided them with what they need to eat and kept them productive through out the day.
Utopia refers to a place that is perfect or nearly perfect. Sir Thomas More created this concept in 1516 when he wrote his book named “Utopia.” His book was based on a imaginary depiction of an island with perfect qualities. This imaginary island has everything including enough jobs for its people to …show more content…

It is the state of being when someone is out of work and is enthusiastically looking for a job. Unemployment rate is the number of those who are jobless divided by all those who are currently in the labor force. Unwaged people have benefits if they are registered and ensure that they are seek work while they have no job. Under unemployment these unemployed workers receive payments to help them while they have no job or income coming in. If If Utopia was to be applied to unemployment then its’ rate would decrease immensely. Utopia is implied to be the most perfect world, however, in Utopia unemployment would not be a problem. Utopia offered six hours of daily labor for each of their citizens. They also offered free education, free medical treatment, and public meals. Utopia is a perfect society that chooses peace over violence, but vise versa when all other methods fail. Unemployment would be solved in Utopia because all Utopians had a daily job in which they earned enough to eat and maintain their family. Men and women worked in agriculture and were well trained since their childhood. Since unemployment is real things do not work this way, the unemployed suffer for not having enough to provide for themselves or their family. In some cases they cannot find a job in so long that they might become …show more content…

Rugaber explains how the jobless rate fell fro 5.7 to 5.5 percent, but mainly because many people gave up searching for jobs, so they were no longer considered as unemployed. He mentions that employers have now produced more than 200,000 jobs for twelve months straight, but this still has not put an end to unemployment. That is a huge amount of jobs, but there are still unemployed people, however, a 5.5 unemployment rate is considered “full employment” because now employers must raise their wage pay to find sufficient qualified workers. This only leads to companies raising their goods and services prices to repair the higher wage pay. So, with that being said would Utopian rules be good for reality; it is hard to say because there wouldn’t be any unemployment. On the other hand, prices for everything else would rise and wages aren’t rising along. Rugaber states that Americans are discouraged about their job predictions and have lost hope, so they are no longer counted as unemployed, which brings the rate to a decline, but in reality unemployment is the same or

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