Individuals who need jobs seek employment help wherever they can get it. The employment situation looks dire when you consider that the current national unemployment rate hovers between 10 and 12 percent. The only employment help some people can count on is their unemployment benefits. Generally unemployed individuals do not think about new careers, but seek employment help to find a job in their current profession, even when those jobs grow scarce. Gone are the days when a person could go to the same plant or factory where a parent worked and join the payroll effortlessly. In the past such employees could expect to stay with the same job until retirement and receive compensation and other benefits such as health insurance for life. However today's workers are fortunate if they can stay with a job four or five years without getting laid off. This is not only true for corporate or private sector jobs, but government and nonprofit organizations are seeing their share of cutbacks resulting in reductions in force. For this reason it would be wise for the unemployed to consider some of the new careers that can provide lasting employment and possibly some additional benefits. These “new” careers are not really new, but different. Some have come about because of advances in technology and others careers such as jobs in the health care sector have increased due to the aging population or other demographic shifts during the 20th and 21st centuries. Two areas where the unemployed can seek new careers are the health care industry and the emerging field of biotechnology.
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