- Tue Aug 06, 2024 2:21 pm
#108142
Hey Harmon,
For the most jobs, there is a certain percentage of accident rates each year. For some jobs, let's say Alaskan crab fisherman, there is a higher accident rate than a job like insurance salesman. If we're talking about the overall percentage of workplace accidents here, lowering the overall number of employees who are doing dangerous jobs like Alaskan crab fishing is not only going to lower the raw number of employees injured, it's also going to lower the percentage of people injured on the job, because the biggest contributors to that overall injury rate have lowered their contributions.
Keep in mind, this entire question is talking about all employment as a whole, so the injuries coming out of very dangerous sectors represent a bigger portion of the overall pie than safer jobs.
Does that make sense?