English edit

Etymology edit

dis- +‎ employment

Noun edit

disemployment (uncountable)

  1. The state of being disemployed, or deprived of employment (as sometimes distinguished from unemployment).
    Antonyms: employment, reemployment
    Coordinate terms: misemployment, unemployment
    • 1651, Jer[emy] Taylor, The Rule and Exercises of Holy Living. [], 2nd edition, London: [] Francis Ashe [], →OCLC:
      this glut of leisure and disemployment
    • 2024 January 19, Eric Larsen, “Vinod Khosla — Silicon Valley legend and early investor in OpenAI — on the coming AI revolution in medicine”, in Advisory Board (Lessons from the C-suite)‎[1]:
      So an AI-enabled future may have all sorts of economic dislocations — not just unemployment, but disemployment — the obsolescence of a lot of professions. But the marginal cost of goods and services will essentially go to zero, providing enough wealth that societies can provide a universal basic income for all. What you’re predicting makes me think of a 1930 piece by John Maynard Keynes called “The economic possibilities of our grandchildren.”