Analysis and Comparison of Unemployment in Texas and New York
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to enlighten and explore “unemployment” in a holistic context. The core objective of this paper is to accumulate the reliable data from the online sources and compare the “unemployment in New York” with “unemployment in Texas”. The research also analyzes many aspects of diverse factors that can influence “unemployment”. The study incorporates diverse statistical tools for the analysis, the comparison between New York and Texas would be executed by applying “one-sample t-test”. In addition, the study incorporates two other variables: “the inflation rate of the United States and the unemployment rate of the United States” in order to evaluate its impact on the “unemployment in New York” and “unemployment in Texas”.
CHAPTER: 1 INTRODUCTION4
CHAPTER 2: LITERATURE REVIEW6
CHAPTER 3: METHODOLOGY9
CHAPTER 4: RESULTS10
T-test Analysis (Comparison between Unemployed People of New York and Texas)10
Regression Analysis (Unemployed People in New York and Inflation Rate)10
Regression Analysis (Unemployed People in Texas and Inflation)11
Regression Analysis (Unemployment Rate of NY and Unemployment Rate of U.S)12
Regression Analysis (Unemployment Rate of Texas and Unemployment Rate of U.S)13
CHAPTER 5: DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION14
REFERENCES15
APPENDIX16
CHAPTER: 1 INTRODUCTION
Unemployment is often at its worst during times of economic crisis. In the United States, unemployment reached levels as high as twenty-five percent during the middle of the Great Depression in the 1930s. Historical data on unemployment can be difficult to compare, since the ways of measuring unemployment—and even the very definition of unemployment—have changed over the years (U.S Census Bureau, 2010). The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) currently uses six different measurements of unemployment. The most widely accepted definition, known as “U3,” consists of the number of eligible workers who cannot find a job despite actively looking for work for at least four weeks. In 2009, U3 unemployment for U.S. citizens reached ten percent for the first time in twenty-six years (U.S Census Bureau, 2010). The unemployment rate among young adults reached more than eighteen percent, its highest level since the years immediately following World War II.
The purpose of this paper is to enlighten and explore unemployment. The core objective of this study is to compare the inclination of unemployment between two significant regions of the United States; New York and Texas. The study variable or the dependant variable selected for this study is unemployment, and the analysis of the study strives to measure the effect of diverse independent variables on the study variable. The data for this study was accumulated from the reliable online sources; in addition, there were several statistical techniques applied to the data in order to reveal the reliable results (U.S Census Bureau, 2010). The primary analysis technique implied in this paper was “regression analysis”; moreover, the study incorporated several other techniques such as “one-sample t-test” in order to validate the results (Menard, 2002). The dependent variable of this study is “unemployment” and the independent variables of this study are “unemployment rate of the United States and ...