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by Maro
379 days ago
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> If you get a job at McDonald's while having a civil engineering degree That would be under_employment (vs un_employment). Un_employment refers to people actively seeking work but unable to find it, while under_employment encompasses individuals who are working but not fully utilizing their skills or working fewer hours than they would like |
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Underemployment as "not working as many hours as you'd like" is the standard definition, and that one actually does seem to respect people's interiority.