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Next page Chapter 18: Employment and Unemployment.

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1 Next page Chapter 18: Employment and Unemployment

2 Jump to first page 1. Employment and Unemployment Statistics

3 Jump to first page n Employed persons includes those 16 years of age and older who are either: u employed by a private firm or a government unit u self-employed u had jobs but were not working because of illness, bad weather, Employed Persons

4 Jump to first page Employment-Population Ratio For February 2005: Employment- Population Ratio = employed persons noninstitutional population 16 years of older * 100 Employment- Population Ratio = 139,100,000 225,041,000 * 100 = 61.8%

5 Jump to first page n Unemployed persons includes those 16 years of age and older, who are not working but are available for work, and either: u (1) engaged in some job-seeking activity in the past 4 weeks. u (2) were waiting to be called back to a job from which they were temporarily laid off. u (3) would have been looking for job but were temporarily ill. u (4) waiting to report for a new job within 30 days. Unemployed Persons

6 Jump to first page Unemployment Rate Unemployment Rate = unemployed persons unemployed + employed persons * 100 Unemployment Rate = unemployed persons labor force * 100 or For February 2005: LFPR = 8,549,000 147,649,000 * 100 = 5.8%

7 Jump to first page Employment-Population Ratio The employment- population ratio has risen over the past 4 decades.

8 Jump to first page Unemployment Rate The unemployment rate been highly variable over the past 4 decades.

9 Jump to first page n The unemployment rate and employment- population ratios come from a monthly household survey which has the following advantages: u Time-consistent and large survey u Time lag in obtaining data is short. u Data is available on a disaggregated basis. u The unemployment rate provides information about the business cycle. Advantages of Household Survey

10 Jump to first page n The monthly household survey has the following disadvantages: u Part-time workers are counted as fully employed even if they wanted to work as a full-time worker. u Unemployed persons must be actively seeking work. u It does not measure persons who are subemployed. u Persons may provide false information. Disadvantages of Household Survey

11 Jump to first page u All unemployed persons are counted equally. u The data contain no information about minimum acceptable wages. Disadvantages of Household Survey

12 Jump to first page Stock-Flow Model At any point in time, there is a measurable stock of people in each of the three boxes that represent categories of labor force status. Population Not in the Labor Force Unemployed Employed But these stocks are simultaneously being depleted by flows in and out of each category. Changes in the rates of these flows can significantly affect the unemployment rate.

13 Jump to first page n Some unemployment is voluntary and some unemployment is involuntary. n The natural rate of unemployment is u The unemployment rate at which there is neither excess demand nor excess supply in the labor market or u The unemployment rate that will occur in the long run if he expected and actual rates of inflation are equal. n The natural rate of unemployment changes over time. Determining Full Employment

14 Jump to first page Questions for Thought: 1. Do you expect the natural rate of unemployment to (a) increase, (b) decrease, or (c) remain at the present level over the next decade? Explain your reasoning.

15 Jump to first page 2. Macroeconomic Output and Employment Determination

16 Jump to first page n Aggregate demand for goods and services indicates the total quantity of goods and services that domestic consumers, businesses, government, and foreign buyers will collectively desire to purchase at each price level. Aggregate Demand

17 Jump to first page n The aggregate demand curve slopes downward because of the u Interest rate effect F A lower price level will reduce money demand and thus interest rates. F The lower interest rate will increase spending on goods such as housing. u Wealth or real balances effect F A lower price level will increase the real value of assets whose value is fixed in nominal terms and thus raise spending. Aggregate Demand

18 Jump to first page u Foreign purchases effect F A lower price level will reduce the price of U.S. goods relative to foreign goods and so foreigners will increase their spending on U.S. goods. Aggregate Demand

19 Jump to first page n Aggregate supply of goods and services is the relationship between the price level and total quantity of real output that firms are willing to produce and offer for sale. u The aggregate supply curve is upward sloping below the natural rate of output. F Since wages are inflexible downward, a decrease in demand will result in layoffs and reduce output. Aggregate Supply

20 Jump to first page u The aggregate supply curve is vertical at the natural rate of output. F Greater demand increases can’t increase output since the economy is at full- employment Aggregate Supply

21 Jump to first page Real Output Determination AS c The intersection of the aggregate demand and supply curves D and S k AS c produces equilibrium price and real output levels P 0 and Q n. Real Output Price Level ScSc D QnQn P0P0 SkSk A

22 Jump to first page Employment Determination In the aggregate labor market, the equilibrium wage rate and level of total employment are determined by the intersection of the aggregate labor demand supply curves. Employment level E n is the natural rate of employment; it is the amount of labor needed to produce the natural level of real output. Employment Wage rate SLSL DLDL EnEn W0W0

23 Jump to first page 3. Frictional Unemployment

24 Jump to first page n Frictional unemployment is unemployment due to voluntary quits, job switches, and new entrants or reentrants into the labor force. n Sources of frictional unemployment: u Search unemployment which is caused by individuals searching for the best wage offer and firms searching for workers to fill job openings. Frictional Unemployment

25 Jump to first page u Wait unemployment which is caused by the excess supply of workers that results from non-market clearing wages. F Temporary layoffs Workers on temporary layoff usually don’t search for another job F Union job queues Workers may wait in a union job queue rather than take a nonunion job F Efficiency wages Efficiency wages contribute to frictional unemployment since firms pay high wages to increase worker productivity. Frictional Unemployment

26 Jump to first page 4. Structural Unemployment

27 Jump to first page n Structural unemployment is unemployment due: u Mismatch between the skills required for available job openings and the skills possessed by those seeking work. u Geographic mismatch between the locations of job openings and job seekers. u Workers losing jobs because of permanent plant closing or job cutbacks. Structural Unemployment

28 Jump to first page 5. Demand-Deficient Unemployment

29 Jump to first page Demand Deficient Unemployment A decline in aggregate demand reduces the demand for labor (from D L to D L1 ). Assuming a rigid nominal wage W 0, the decline in labor demand results in involuntary demand-deficient unemployment by the amount ab. Employment Wage rate SLSL DLDL EnEn W0W0 D L1 E1E1 a b

30 Jump to first page n Nominal wages are inflexible downward is unemployment due to: u Unions u Bias toward layoffs by firms u Implicit contracts u Insider-Outsider theories Wage Rigidity

31 Jump to first page Questions for Thought: 1.Define the term structural unemployment and distinguish it from frictional and demand- deficient unemployment. Why might structural unemployment fall when demand-deficient unemployment declines?

32 Jump to first page 6. The Distribution of Unemployment

33 Jump to first page n Unemployment rates are higher for: u Less skilled workers u Teenagers u Blacks. n Mean and women now have unemployment rates that are very similar. n The percentage of persons unemployed for a long duration (15+ weeks) rises during recessions. Distribution of Unemployment

34 Jump to first page 7. Reducing Unemployment: Public Policies

35 Jump to first page n Expansionary fiscal and monetary policy can used to reduce demand-deficient unemployment. n Complications arise from conducting stabilization policy. u Time lags F It takes time for changes in policy to affect the unemployment rate Reducing Unemployment

36 Jump to first page u Crowding out effect F Higher government spending causes the government to borrow more funds and thus raise interest rates and reduce private spending. u Tendency to create inflation. Reducing Unemployment

37 Jump to first page End Chapter 18


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