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TopicContest Stats and Discussion - Part 1324 - CBX Winners Announced
red sox 777
03/31/19 11:46:16 AM
#238:


LusterSoldier posted...
Haste_2 posted...
The GameFAQs unemployment rate is approximately 12.5% according to yesterday's Poll of the Day. That's over three times the US unemployment rate, even for the age group of 25-34 years. I'm guessing the reason for that is that many gamers are lazy and/or anti-social. That would limit friends and networking, limiting employment opportunities.


I was also quite a bit surprised that the Full-Time Work option got almost 58%. At least in the US, Obamacare killed off a lot of full-time jobs due to businesses being required to provide health insurance to their employees if they have at least 50 full-time workers. Retail jobs were most affected by this employer mandate, while minimum wage jobs were disproportionally affected by the mandate. As a result, many people were stuck with part-time jobs, so I thought this would have had some effect on the site's American userbase voting in this poll. Guess not.

Of course, the employer mandate doesn't apply to businesses with less than 50 full-time employees, which would mostly apply to small businesses. So it could still be possible for someone to have a full-time job in the US despite being paid at or just slightly above the minimum wage.

The Full-Time Work option getting almost 58% in this poll means that we have a large enough userbase to support an After Work Vote. Generally speaking, only full-time workers would be expected to contribute towards an After Work Vote. Part-time workers usually don't work enough hours each day to be faced with a situation where they have to wait until getting home from work to vote in the poll, though it could be possible with an 8+ hour work day.


I could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure 58% is far below the average full-time employment rate the US had for the period from its founding to the 2008 crash, at least for people matching Gamefaqs demographics (mostly younger men). Even if you exclude students from the denominator it's still probably quite low compared to historical numbers. It's a lot higher than it's been in the last 10 years but we are seeing near-record lows in the (flawed) official unemployment rate, so that would make sense.
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