Title: Macroeconomic Instability: Unemployment
1Macroeconomic InstabilityUnemployment
Inflation
Chapter 8
2The Business Cycle
Phases of the Business Cycle
Level of business activity
Time
3The Business Cycle
Phases of the Business Cycle
PEAK
Level of business activity
Time
4The Business Cycle
Phases of the Business Cycle
PEAK
RECESSION
Level of business activity
Time
5The Business Cycle
Phases of the Business Cycle
PEAK
RECESSION
TROUGH
Level of business activity
Time
6The Business Cycle
Phases of the Business Cycle
PEAK
RECESSION
TROUGH
RECOVERY
Level of business activity
Time
7The Business Cycle
Phases of the Business Cycle
PEAK
RECESSION
TROUGH
RECOVERY
SECULAR TREND
Level of business activity
Time
8The Business Cycle
Phases of the Business Cycle
PEAK
RECESSION
TROUGH
RECOVERY
SECULAR TREND
Level of business activity
Time
9US Recessions since 1950
Duration, months
Depth (Decline in real output)
Period
1953-54 10 -3.7 1957-58
8 -3.9 1960-61
10 -1.6 1969-70 11
-1.0 1973-75 16
-4.9 1980 6 -2.3 1981-82
16 -3.3 1990-91
8 -1.6 March-Nov 2001 8
-2.0
10UNEMPLOYMENT
3 Types of Unemployment....
Frictional Structural Cyclical
11Types of Unemployment....
Frictional Unemployment
- Workers in between jobs - Voluntarily
quit but searching - Involuntarily
fired and searching - A reflection of a highly
mobile work force. Career choices, new degrees.,
etc. - Tends to be of short duration
12Types of Unemployment....
Structural Unemployment
-Workers who do not have the minimum skills
(social and/or technical) to meet the
ever-changing workplace requirements. - A
mismatch between workers location and the
locations of job openings. - Tends to be more
permanent and with devastating social implications
13Types of Unemployment....
Cyclical Unemployment
- Unemployment caused by recessions. - Caused by
a deficiency in total spending - It ends when
companies start hiring - Its duration depends on
the length of the recession
14Defining Full Employment
Full- employment - Unemployment rate Natural
Rate of Unemployment Potential output 1-
Not Automatic 2- Not Immutable
15UNEMPLOYMENT
Measurement of Unemployment, 2002
74,700,000
71,400,000
Total Population 288,600,000
134,200,000
Labor Force 142,500,000
8,300,000
16Measuring Unemployment
Criticisms of the rate calculation.... 1-
Part-time Employment 2- Discouraged Workers 3-
False Information
17Unequal Burdens of Unemployment
1- Occupation 2- Age 3- Race 4- Gender 5- Duration
Non-economic Costs
18GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE
Unemployment Rates 5 Industrial Nations - 1992 -
2002
15 10 5 0
France
U.K.
Germany
U.S.
Japan
1997
1992
2002
Source Economic Report of the President, 2003
19INFLATION
- A rising general level of prices
- Rate of inflation calculated using index numbers
- Used for establishing salary levels
Rule of 70 If we divide the number 70 by the
annual rate of inflation, the quotient is the
number of years it takes for inflation to double
the price level
70 -----------------------------
------------ Annual rate of inflation
Number of years required to double price level
20GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE
Inflation Rates in Five Industrial Nations - 1992
- 2002
10 5 0
Italy
Germany
U.S.
France
Japan
1997
1992
2002
Source Bureau of Labor Statistics
21What Causes Inflation?
DEMAND-PULL INFLATION
P
Price level
Q
Real domestic output employment
22What Causes Inflation?
DEMAND-PULL INFLATION
P
Price level
Range 1
Q
Real domestic output employment
23What Causes Inflation?
DEMAND-PULL INFLATION
P
Price level
Range 2
Range 1
Q
Real domestic output employment
24What Causes Inflation?
DEMAND-PULL INFLATION
P
Range 3
Price level
Range 2
Range 1
Q
Real domestic output employment
25What Causes Inflation?
DEMAND-PULL INFLATION
P
Range 3
Price level
Range 2
Range 1
Full- employment output
Q
Real domestic output employment
26ANTICIPATED INFLATION
11
Nominal Interest Rate
27ANTICIPATED INFLATION
11
5
Nominal Interest Rate
Real Interest Rate
28ANTICIPATED INFLATION
6
11
Inflation Premium
5
Nominal Interest Rate
Real Interest Rate
29- discouraged workers
- GDP gap
- Okuns Law
- inflation
- rule of 70
- demand-pull inflation
- cost-push inflation
- per-unit production costs
- nominal income
- real income
- anticipated inflation
- unanticipated inflation
- COLAs
- inflation premium
- real interest rate
- nominal interest rate
- hyperinflation
- business cycle
- peak
- recession
- trough
- recovery
- seasonal variation
- secular trend
- frictional unemployment
- structural unemployment
- cyclical unemployment
- full-employment unemployment rate
- natural rate of unemployment
- potential output
- labor force
- unemployment rate