job demand - significado y definición. Qué es job demand
Diclib.com
Diccionario ChatGPT
Ingrese una palabra o frase en cualquier idioma 👆
Idioma:

Traducción y análisis de palabras por inteligencia artificial ChatGPT

En esta página puede obtener un análisis detallado de una palabra o frase, producido utilizando la mejor tecnología de inteligencia artificial hasta la fecha:

  • cómo se usa la palabra
  • frecuencia de uso
  • se utiliza con más frecuencia en el habla oral o escrita
  • opciones de traducción
  • ejemplos de uso (varias frases con traducción)
  • etimología

Qué (quién) es job demand - definición

DEMAND OF A CONSUMER OVER A BUNDLE OF GOODS THAT MINIMIZES THEIR EXPENDITURE WHILE DELIVERING A FIXED LEVEL OF UTILITY.
Compensated demand curve; Compensated Demand Curve; Hicksian demand; Hicksian demand curve; Compensated demand; Compensated demand function

Labor demand         
CONCEPT IN ECONOMICS DESCRIBING THE NUMBER OF LABOR-HOURS AN EMPLOYER IS WILLING TO HIRE
Labour demand; Labor demand function; Labour demand function; Demand for labor; Labor Demand
In economics, the labor demand of an employer is the number of labor-hours that the employer is willing to hire based on the various exogenous (externally determined) variables it is faced with, such as the wage rate, the unit cost of capital, the market-determined selling price of its output, etc. The function specifying the quantity of labor that would be demanded at any of various possible values of these exogenous variables is called the labor demand function.
Job demands-resources model         
The Job Demands-Resources model (JD-R); JD-R; Job Demands-Resources model
The job demands-resources model (JD-R model) is an occupational stress model that suggests strain is a response to imbalance between demands on the individual and the resources he or she has to deal with those demands. The JD-R was introduced as an alternative to other models of employee well-being, such as the demand-control model and the effort-reward imbalance model.
Job hunting         
  • [[Job fair]] for new university graduates in [[Japan]].  See "[[Simultaneous recruiting of new graduates]]".
THE ACT OF LOOKING FOR EMPLOYMENT
Job seeking; Job search; Job applicants; Job applicant; Job searching; Job hunt; Job-hunting
Job hunting, job seeking, or job searching is the act of looking for employment, due to unemployment, underemployment, discontent with a current position, or a desire for a better position.

Wikipedia

Hicksian demand function

In microeconomics, a consumer's Hicksian demand function or compensated demand function for a good is his quantity demanded as part of the solution to minimizing his expenditure on all goods while delivering a fixed level of utility. Essentially, a Hicksian demand function shows how an economic agent would react to the change in the price of a good, if the agent's income was compensated to guarantee the agent the same utility previous to the change in the price of the good—the agent will remain on the same indifference curve before and after the change in the price of the good. The function is named after John Hicks.

Mathematically,

h ( p , u ¯ ) = arg min x i p i x i {\displaystyle h(p,{\bar {u}})=\arg \min _{x}\sum _{i}p_{i}x_{i}}
s u b j e c t   t o     u ( x ) u ¯ {\displaystyle {\rm {subject~to}}\ \ u(x)\geq {\bar {u}}} .

where h(p,u) is the Hicksian demand function, or commodity bundle demanded, at price vector p and utility level u ¯ {\displaystyle {\bar {u}}} . Here p is a vector of prices, and x is a vector of quantities demanded, so the sum of all pixi is total expenditure on all goods. (Note that if there is more than one vector of quantities that minimizes expenditure for the given utility, we have a Hicksian demand correspondence rather than a function.)

Hicksian demand functions are useful for isolating the effect of relative prices on quantities demanded of goods, in contrast to Marshallian demand functions, which combine that with the effect of the real income of the consumer being reduced by a price increase, as explained below.

Ejemplos de uso de job demand
1. Restaurants employ 12.5m workers and job demand will grow 15 per cent by 2016, says the National Restaurant Association.
2. Country‘s 60 per cent revenue in software export and related job demand comes from the US market.
3. A large study on the future of work in the UK predicts the rise of the "mobile worker" moving – laptop and mobile in tow – between office, home, hotel, airport lounge or motorway service station as the needs of a job demand.
4. Alan Townsend, chief operating officer of Monster UK, said: "Online job demand in the UK has continued a downward trend over the past three months which is in line with data from the ONS showing that the rate of unemployment [the internationally preferred measure of joblessness] has risen to its highest level since 2002." Employers had hung on to staff last year in spite of a slowdown in the economy but were now trying to boost productivity by restricting new recruitment, he said.