Page 16 - 110年原住民就業狀況調查度報告
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2.39% of indigenous workers were in government-provided
temporary jobs, and 97.61% were not in government-provided
temporary jobs. Among the government-provided temporary workers,
96.90% believed that temporary work was helpful in improving their
lives, and 83.17% believed it was helpful in their future employment.
7. Job seeking channels: In 2021, the percentage of indigenous people
who found their current jobs through "introduction by relatives,
friends, or mentors" was the highest, at 43.16%; this was followed by
"self-referral and inquiry", at 19.83%; and "civil job banks (including
online websites)", at 14.39%.
IV. Unemployment Situation
In 2021, there were 267,033 people in the indigenous labor force;
11,079 of which were unemployed and made up an unemployment rate of
3.98%. Compared to the 2021 unemployment rate of 3.95% for the entire
population, the unemployment rate for indigenous people is slightly higher
by 0.03 percentage points.
1. Number of weeks unemployed: Indigenous unemployed persons
were unemployed for an average of 19.53 data-standard weeks.
2. Job seeking channels for the unemployed: Of all job seeking channels
used by indigenous unemployed people in 2021, "applying through
civil job banks (including online websites)" represented the highest
percentage (52.44%); this was followed by "introduction by relatives,
friends, or mentors" (35.53%), "applying through public employment
service organizations (including online websites)" (14.89%),
"looking at newspaper job advertisements" (11.44%), and
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