yes
Wayne Vroman has written: 'Applications for unemployment insurance benefits' -- subject(s): Insurance, Unemployment, Unemployed, Unemployment Insurance 'The decline in unemployment insurance claims activity in the 1980s' -- subject(s): Claimants, Insurance, Unemployment, Unemployed, Unemployment Insurance 'Labor market changes and unemployment insurance benefit availability' -- subject(s): Insurance, Unemployment, Labor market, Unemployment Insurance 'The alternative base period in unemployment insurance' -- subject(s): Insurance, Unemployment, States, Unemployment Insurance 'Unemployment insurance trust fund adequacy in the 1990s' -- subject(s): Finance, Insurance, Unemployment, Unemployment Insurance 'Experience rating in unemployment insurance' -- subject(s): Experience rating, Insurance, Unemployment, Unemployment Insurance
Donald L. Diefenbach has written: 'Survey of unemployment insurance financing issues' -- subject(s): Finance, Insurance, Unemployment, Unemployment Insurance 'Financing America's unemployment compensation program' -- subject(s): Finance, Insurance, Unemployment, Unemployment Insurance
how does unemployment insurance influence staffing
William J Gainer has written: 'Unemployment insurance' -- subject(s): Insurance, Unemployment, Unemployment Insurance
Yes but it only matters on how large the scope of your unemployment insurance can cover for your health insurance.
B. S. B. Stevens has written: 'New horizons' -- subject(s): Commerce, Economic conditions 'Unemployment insurance and unemployment assistance in Great Britain' -- subject(s): Unemployed, Insurance, Unemployment, Public welfare, Unemployment Insurance 'The next year in the Pacific' -- subject(s): Pan-Pacific relations, World War, 1939-1945, Foreign relations
Alfonso Alba-Ramirez has written: 'Jobfinding and wages when longrun unemployment is really long' -- subject(s): Effect of unemployment insurance on, Insurance, Unemployment, Statistics, Unemployed, Unemployment, Unemployment Insurance
The employer pays a percentage of payroll as unemployment insurance premiums.
A military discharge is given when a member of the armed forces is released from their obligation to serve.Typically, an honorable discharge is given when a servicemember meets one or more of several requirements.The contracted period of service is finished;An order of a superior or military court decides the term of service is over;The conflict is finished and the military unit is being released from active duty.Being passed up twice in a row for promotion when eligible, though this varies by branch of service;Certain other circumstances, including (in some countries) homosexuality, though in the United States this was replaced by the "don't ask, don't tell" policy in 1993.A medical discharge is given when the service member has a medical condition that makes them unfit for military service. This may be an injury sustained in combat.A less than honorable discharge refers to a discharge that occurs under other than honorable conditions. This can be due to generally improper conduct, conviction of a crime either in a military court martial or a civilian court, or some other inappropriate action on the part of a soldier or someone associated with that soldier.The United States military subdivides less-than-honorable discharges into four categories, in increasing order of severity:general discharge;undesirable discharge;bad conduct discharge; anddishonorable discharge.Undesirable discharges or worse typically disqualify the soldier from receiving veterans' benefits, and any less-than-honorable discharge --- even a general discharge --- usually renders the discharged soldier ineligible for unemployment insurance benefits, because such a discharge is considered tantamount to having been "fired" from the most recently-held job.In addition, those given dishonorable discharges may permanently forfeit certain citizenship rights, including the right to legally possess a firearm (under the federal Gun Control Act passed in 1968), and the right to vote in some states.
Bruce D. Meyer has written: 'A quasi-experimental approach to the effects of unemployment insurance' -- subject(s): Insurance, Unemployment, Mathematical models, Unemployment Insurance 'Implications of the Illinois reemployment bonus experiments for theories of unemployment and policy design' -- subject(s): Econometric models, Insurance, Unemployment, Unemployment Insurance, Unemployment insurance claimants 'Welfare, the Earned Income Tax Credit, and the labor supply of single mothers' -- subject(s): Employment, Single mothers, Earned income tax credit, Public welfare 'Consumption and income poverty over the business cycle' 'Why are there so few black entrepreneurs?' -- subject(s): Econometric models, African American businesspeople 'Policy lessons from the U.S. unemployment insurance experiments' -- subject(s): Claimants, Incentive (Psychology), Insurance, Unemployent, Insurance, Unemployment, Services for, Unemployent Insurance, Unemployment Insurance 'Further results on measuring the well-being of the poor using income and consumption' -- subject(s): Mathematical models, Poor, Well-being, Consumption (Economics), Economic conditions, Income, Single mothers
Pierre Issalys has written: 'Unemployment insurance benefits' -- subject(s): Canada, Canada. Unemployment Insurance Commission, Law and legislation, Unemployment Insurance
FUTA. Federal unemployment tax assistance insurance for a limited amount and period of time.