Scotland's Labour Market Insights: October 2024
Insights from a range of labour market data sources for Scotland, including employment estimates by type of work, unemployment and economic inactivity estimates.
Glossary
Economically active: The population who are either in employment or unemployed.
Economically inactive: People not in employment and who do not meet the criteria for unemployment. This group includes:
- those who want a job but who have not been seeking work in the last 4 weeks
- those who want a job and are seeking work but not available to start
- those who do not want a job
For example, students not working or seeking work and those in retirement.
Employment: There are two main ways of looking at employment: the number of people with jobs or the number of jobs. These two concepts represent different things as one person can have more than one job. The number of people in employment is measured via the Labour Force Survey and consist of those aged 16 and over. Employment measures the number of people who did at least one hour of paid work or had a job they were temporarily away from. People who do unpaid work in a family business and people on Government-supported training and employment programs are also included. This is in accordance with the International Labour Organisation (ILO) definition.
Unemployment: The ILO definition of unemployment covers people who are 16 years and over:
- without a job, have been actively seeking work in the past four weeks and are available to start work in the next fortnight
or
- out of work, have accepted a job and are waiting to start it in the next two weeks
Employment rate: The proportion of people aged between 16 and 64 years who are in employment.
Unemployment rate: The proportion of economically active people aged 16 and over who are unemployed.
Economic inactivity rate: The number of economically inactive people expressed as a percentage of the relevant population.
Sex: Sex is self-reported by respondents participating in the ONS Annual Population Survey (APS). No documentation is asked for by the interviewer or provided by the respondent. Hence, analysis is based on 'sex' rather than 'gender'.
Median earnings: The median measures the amount earned by the average employee, i.e. the level of earnings at which half the population are above and half the population are below.
Rates: Rates represent the proportion of the population or subgroup with a certain characteristic. They allow changes in the labour market to be interpreted in a wider context by accounting for changes in the population or the number of people who are economically active. Rates can be calculated for different age groups.
For headline employment, economic activity and economic inactivity, the reference population is those aged 16 to 64. For unemployment, the reference population is the active population aged 16 and over. Thus, people aged 65 and over who continue to be economically active are included in the base while those who are economically inactive will not.
Percentage point change: Percentage points are used when comparing two percentages. The abbreviation is pp. For example, if a rate was 10% and it increased to 15%, then it increased by 5 percentage points.
Contact
For enquiries about this publication please contact:
Labour Market Statistics,
Office of the Chief Economic Adviser
Telephone: 0131 244 6773,
E-mail: LMStats@gov.scot
For general enquiries about Scottish Government statistics please contact:
Office of the Chief Statistician
E-mail: statistics.enquiries@gov.scot
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