Noun
unemployment insurance (usually uncountable, plural unemployment insurances)
Insurance against loss of earnings during the time that an able-bodied worker is involuntarily unemployed.
According to government spokesmen Ali Rabiee, who had been minister of co-operation, labor, and social welfare for some time, nearly 3 million formal and 4 million contractual employees face pay cuts or layoffs and there is no unemployment insurance plan. Source: Internet
Additional information about applying for unemployment insurance can be found on DEED's website at https://uimn. Source: Internet
As bad as Colorado’s new unemployment figures may turn out to be, they probably do not fully capture the scope of those out of work because the state is struggling to accommodate demand for unemployment insurance claims. Source: Internet
Among other measures, he completely halted all public grants to the obligatory unemployment insurance introduced in 1927, resulting in workers making higher contributions and fewer benefits for the unemployed. Source: Internet
Another 1.6 million Americans filed new claims for unemployment insurance last week. Source: Internet
Back in March, when Congress was debating pandemic relief, Senator Rick Scott of Florida against a Democratic plan to greatly expand federal unemployment insurance. Source: Internet