Vacant Job
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An Vacant Job is a paid job (in the job market) without a worker.
- AKA: Unfilled Open Post.
- Context:
- It can be counted by a Job Vacancies Count.
- It can be in a Job Opportunity Relationship with a Worker (such as unemployed worker, and job candidate).
- …
- Counter-Example(s):
- an Occupied Job/Filled Job.
- a Destroyed Job.
- See: Structural Unemployment, Job Opening, Job Vacancy Rate.
References
2013
- http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/statistics_explained/index.php/Glossary:Job_vacancy_rate_%28JVR%29
- A job vacancy is a post, either newly created, unoccupied or about to become vacant, which the employer: actively seeks to fill with a suitable candidate from outside the enterprise (including any further necessary steps); immediately or in the near future. Although the definition states that a job vacancy should be open to candidates from outside the enterprise, this does not exclude the possibility of appointing an internal candidate to the post. A post that is open to internal candidates only, however, is not considered a job vacancy.
The job vacancy rate, abbreviated as JVR, measures the percentage of vacant posts, as defined above, compared with the total number of occupied and unoccupied posts; it is calculated as follows: JVR = number of job vacancies / (number of occupied posts + number of job vacancies) * 100
An occupied post is a post within an organization to which an employee has been assigned.
- A job vacancy is a post, either newly created, unoccupied or about to become vacant, which the employer: actively seeks to fill with a suitable candidate from outside the enterprise (including any further necessary steps); immediately or in the near future. Although the definition states that a job vacancy should be open to candidates from outside the enterprise, this does not exclude the possibility of appointing an internal candidate to the post. A post that is open to internal candidates only, however, is not considered a job vacancy.