National Income & Business Cycles

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National Income & Business Cycles The natural rate of unemployment: what it means what causes it understanding its behavior in the real world 0 1 Natural rate of unemployment Frictional unemployment Structural unemployment Sectoral shift Unemployment insurance Wage rigidity Insiders and outsiders Efficiency wages Minimum wage Natural rate of unemployment: the rate of unemployment around which the economy fluctuates. actual unemployment = In a recession, the actual unemployment rate the natural rate. In a boom, the actual unemployment rate the natural rate. 2 3

Notation: L = # of workers in labor force E = # of employed workers U = # of unemployed U/L = unemployment rate 4 5 1. L is exogenously fixed. 2. During any given month, s = fraction of employed workers that become separated from their jobs, f = fraction of unemployed workers that find jobs. 6 7

Definition: the labor market is in steady state, or long-run equilibrium, if the unemployment rate is. The steady-state condition is: f U = s E Solve for U/L: so, 8 9 Each month, 1% of employed workers lose their jobs (s = 0.01) Each month, 19% of unemployed workers find jobs (f = 0.19) Find the natural rate of unemployment: If the rate of separation is 0.03 and the rate of job finding is 0.21, what is the value of the natural rate of unemployment? s = f = Equilibrium: U/L = 10 11

How can a policy affect (reduce) the natural rate of unemployment? A policy will reduce the natural rate of unemployment only if it s, or f. Can you think of a policy that would be able to reduce the natural rate of unemployment? If job finding were instantaneous (f = 1), then all spells of unemployment would be brief, and the natural rate would be near zero. There are two reasons why f < 1: 1. job search ( ) 2. wage rigidity ( ) 12 13 frictional unemployment: caused by the time it takes workers to search for a job occurs because workers have different jobs have geographic mobility of workers flow of information about vacancies and job candidates def: Changes in the among industries or regions. example: more jobs repairing, fewer jobs repairing example: labor demand increases in sectors, decreases in sectors Result: unemployment 14 15

Industrial revolution (1800s): agriculture declines, manufacturing soars Energy crisis (1970s): demand shifts from larger cars to smaller ones Health care spending as % of GDP: 1960: 5.2 2000: 13.8 1980: 9.1 2010: 17.9 16 17 UI pays part of a worker s former wages for a limited time after losing his/her job. UI search unemployment, because it: the opportunity cost of being unemployed the urgency of finding work f Benefits of UI By allowing workers more time to search, UI may lead to matches between jobs and workers, which would lead to productivity and incomes. There are two reasons why f < 1: 1. job search 2. wage rigidity 18 19

The min. wage may exceed the eq m wage Which workers are more likely to be impacted? Studies: a 10% increase in min. wage increases teen unemployment by 20 21 Unions exercise monopoly power to secure higher wages for their members. When the union wage exceeds the eq m wage, unemployment results. : Employed union workers whose interest is to keep wages high. : Unemployed non-union workers who prefer eq m wages, so there would be enough jobs for them. industry Private sector (total) Government (total) Construction Mining Manufacturing Retail trade Transportation Finance, insurance Professional services # employed (1000s) 104,737 20,450 6,244 780 13,599 14,582 4,355 6,111 12,171 U % of total 6.9 37.0 14.0 7.2 10.5 4.9 20.4 1.1 2.1 wage ratio 122.6 121.1 151.7 96.4 107.2 102.4 123.5 90.2 99.1 Education 4,020 13.0 112.6 22 Health care 15,835 7.5 wage ratio = 100 (union wage) / (nonunion wage) 114.9 23

Theories in which higher wages increase worker productivity by: attracting higher increasing worker reducing improving Use the material we ve just covered to come up with a policy or policies to try to reduce the natural rate of unemployment. Note whether your policy targets frictional or structural unemployment. Firms pay above-equilibrium wages to raise productivity. Result: unemployment. 24 25 # of weeks unemployed # of unemployed persons in group (% of all unemployed persons) time spent unemployed by this group (% of time spent unemployed by all groups) 1-4 42% 8.1% 5-14 30% 21.5% 15 or more 27% 70.4% 26 27

Dollars per hour $9 $8 $7 $6 $5 $4 $3 $2 $1 $0 minimum wage in 2009 dollars minimum wage in current dollars 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 28 year Union membership selected years percent of labor force 1930 12% 1945 35% 1954 35% 1970 27% 1983 20.1% 2012 11.3% Since early 1980s, the natural rate and union membership have. But, from 1950s to about 1980, the natural rate while union membership. 29 140 120 100 80 60 40 Price per barrel of oil, in 2009 dollars 1970s: The Baby Boomers were young. Young workers change jobs more frequently (high value of ). Late 1980s through today: Baby Boomers aged. Middle-aged workers change jobs less often (low ). 20 0 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 30 31

Before the recession around 5% Now estimates around % - Long-term unemployed skills and attractiveness to employers - Heightened mismatch - Higher unemployment benefits Fed ( mandate) monetary policy? NAIRU 1. The natural rate of unemployment the long-run average or steady state rate of unemployment depends on the rates of job separation and job finding 2. Frictional unemployment due to the time it takes to match workers with jobs may be increased by unemployment insurance 32 33 3. Structural unemployment results from wage rigidity: the real wage remains above the equilibrium level caused by: minimum wage, unions, efficiency wages 4. Behavior of the natural rate in the U.S. rose from 1960 to early 1980s, then fell possible explanations: trends in real minimum wage, union membership, prevalence of sectoral shifts, and aging of the Baby Boomers 34