| 释义 | 
		Definition of frictional unemployment in English: frictional unemploymentnoun mass nounEconomics The unemployment which exists in any economy due to people being in the process of moving from one job to another.  Example sentencesExamples -  There is likely to be some frictional unemployment even when there is technically full employment, because most people change jobs from time to time.
 -  With unemployment at 4.4% of the available workforce, the country is scarcely above what economists term ‘frictional unemployment’.
 -  If there is an inefficient excess of frictional unemployment, it should be reduced by policies that change search behavior and improve the effectiveness of job markets.
 -  If unemployment was previously kept to zero by forcing everyone to keep a job even if they didn't want it, it should rise, even in a madly growing economy, as frictional unemployment is allowed to grow to its natural rate.
 -  But how can we find out whether the U.S. economy has too much, too little, or the right amount of frictional unemployment?
 
    Definition of frictional unemployment in US English: frictional unemploymentnoun Economics The unemployment which exists in any economy due to people being in the process of moving from one job to another.  Example sentencesExamples -  If there is an inefficient excess of frictional unemployment, it should be reduced by policies that change search behavior and improve the effectiveness of job markets.
 -  With unemployment at 4.4% of the available workforce, the country is scarcely above what economists term ‘frictional unemployment’.
 -  But how can we find out whether the U.S. economy has too much, too little, or the right amount of frictional unemployment?
 -  If unemployment was previously kept to zero by forcing everyone to keep a job even if they didn't want it, it should rise, even in a madly growing economy, as frictional unemployment is allowed to grow to its natural rate.
 -  There is likely to be some frictional unemployment even when there is technically full employment, because most people change jobs from time to time.
 
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