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2 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 3 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. C H A P T E R O U T L I N E 7 Unemployment, Inflation, and Long-Run Growth.

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Presentation on theme: "2 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 3 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. C H A P T E R O U T L I N E 7 Unemployment, Inflation, and Long-Run Growth."— Presentation transcript:

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2 2 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.

3 3 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. C H A P T E R O U T L I N E 7 Unemployment, Inflation, and Long-Run Growth Unemployment Measuring Unemployment Components of the Unemployment Rate The Costs of Unemployment Inflation The Consumer Price Index The Costs of Inflation Long-Run Growth Output and Productivity Growth Looking Ahead

4 4 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. employed Any person 16 years old or older (1) who works for pay, either for someone else or in his or her own business for 1 or more hours per week, (2) who works without pay for 15 or more hours per week in a family enterprise, or (3) who has a job but has been temporarily absent with or without pay. unemployed A person 16 years old or older who is not working, is available for work, and has made specific efforts to find work during the previous 4 weeks. Unemployment Measuring Unemployment

5 5 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. not in the labor force A person who is not looking for work because he or she does not want a job or has given up looking. labor force The number of people employed plus the number of unemployed. labor force = employed + unemployed population = labor force + not in labor force

6 6 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. unemployment rate The ratio of the number of people unemployed to the total number of people in the labor force. labor force participation rate The ratio of the labor force to the total population 16 years old or older.

7 7 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. TABLE 7.1 Employed, Unemployed, and the Labor Force, 1950–2012 (1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6) Population 16 Years Old or Over (Millions) Labor Force (Millions) Employed (Millions) Unemployed (Millions) Labor Force Participation Rate (Percentage Points) Unemployment Rate (Percentage Points) 1950105.062.258.93.359.25.3 1960117.269.665.83.959.45.5 1970137.182.878.74.160.44.9 1980167.7106.999.37.663.87.1 1990189.2125.8118.87.066.55.6 2000212.6142.6136.95.767.14.0 2012243.3155.0142.512.563.78.1 Note: Figures are civilian only (military excluded).

8 8 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. TABLE 7.2 Unemployment Rates by Demographic Group, 1982 and 2012 YearsNovember 1982December 2012 Total10.8 7.8 White9.6 6.9 Men20+9.06.2 Women20+8.16.3 Both sexes16–1921.321.6 African American20.2 14.0 Men Women 20+ 19.3 16.5 14.0 12.2 Both sexes16–1949.540.5 Components of the Unemployment Rate Unemployment Rates for Different Demographic Groups

9 9 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. TABLE 7.3 Regional Differences in Unemployment, 1975, 1982, 1991, 2003 and 2010 19751982199120032010 U.S. avg.8.59.76.76.0 9.6 Cal.9.9 7.56.7 12.4 Fla.10.78.27.35.1 11.5 Ill.7.111.37.16.7 10.3 Mass.11.27.99.05.8 8.5 Mich.12.515.59.27.3 12.5 N.J.10.29.06.65.9 9.5 N.Y.9.58.67.26.3 8.6 N.C.8.69.05.86.5 10.6 Ohio9.112.56.46.1 10.1 Tex.5.66.96.66.8 8.2 Unemployment Rates in States and Regions

10 10 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. discouraged-worker effect The decline in the measured unemployment rate that results when people who want to work but cannot find jobs grow discouraged and stop looking, thus dropping out of the ranks of the unemployed and the labor force. Discouraged-Worker Effects The BLS survey provides some evidence on the size of the discouraged-worker effect. Respondents who indicate that they have stopped searching for work are asked why they stopped. If the respondent cites inability to find employment as the sole reason for not searching, that person might be classified as a discouraged worker. Some economists argue that adding the number of discouraged workers to the number who are now classified as unemployed gives a better picture of the unemployment situation.

11 11 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. TABLE 7.4 Average Duration of Unemployment, 1970–2012 Weeks 1970 8.6198515.6200012.6 197111.3198615.0200113.1 197212.0198714.5200216.6 197310.0198813.5200319.2 1974 9.8198911.9200419.6 197514.2199012.0200518.4 197615.8199113.7200616.8 197714.3199217.7200716.8 197811.9199318.0200817.9 197910.8199418.8200924.4 198011.9199516.6201033.0 198113.7199616.7201139.3 198215.6199715.8201239.4 198320.0199814.5 198418.2199913.4 The Duration of Unemployment

12 12 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. When we consider the various costs of unemployment, it is useful to categorize unemployment into three types: Frictional unemployment Structural unemployment Cyclical unemployment The Costs of Unemployment Some Unemployment Is Inevitable

13 13 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. frictional unemployment The portion of unemployment that is due to the normal turnover in the labor market; used to denote short-run job/skill-matching problems. structural unemployment The portion of unemployment that is due to changes in the structure of the economy that result in a significant loss of jobs in certain industries. Frictional, Structural, and Cyclical Unemployment natural rate of unemployment The unemployment rate that occurs as a normal part of the functioning of the economy. Sometimes taken as the sum of the frictional unemployment rate and the structural unemployment rate. cyclical unemployment Unemployment that is above frictional plus structural unemployment.

14 14 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. The costs of unemployment are neither evenly distributed across the population nor easily quantified. The social consequences of the Depression of the 1930s are perhaps the hardest to comprehend. Few emerged from this period unscathed. At the bottom were the poor and the fully unemployed, about 25 percent of the labor force. Even those who kept their jobs found themselves working part-time. Many people lost all or part of their savings as the stock market crashed and thousands of banks failed. Social Consequences

15 15 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Throughout the recession of 2008–2009 and the slow recovery afterwards, many young college graduates found themselves unemployed for a number of months. Economists believe that the negative effect of early unemployment lasts for many years! Even fifteen years following the recession in 1979–1982, wage rates of those with post-college unemployment lagged substantially. Not only did low wages persist, but fewer graduates in recessionary periods were able to enter high prestige jobs, even when the economy recovered. E C O N O M I C S I N P R A C T I C E The Consequences of Unemployment Persist THINKING PRACTICALLY 1.Describe a mechanism that might help explain the persistence of wage-effects from a recession.

16 16 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. consumer price index (CPI) A price index computed each month by the Bureau of Labor Statistics using a bundle that is meant to represent the “market basket” purchased monthly by the typical urban consumer. Inflation The Consumer Price Index producer price indexes (PPIs) Measures of prices that producers receive for products at all stages in the production process. Once called wholesale price indexes, PPIs are calculated separately for various stages in the production process. The three main categories are finished goods, intermediate materials, and crude materials, although there are subcategories within each of these categories.

17 17 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. The CPI market basket shows how a typical consumer divides his or her money among various goods and services. The CPI market basket for December 2007 shows that most of a consumer’s money goes toward housing, transportation, and food and beverages. ▲ FIGURE 7.1 The CPI Market Basket

18 18 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. TABLE 7.5 The CPI, 1950–2012 Percentage Change in CPICPI Percentage Change in CPICPI Percentage Change in CPICPI 19501.324.119714.440.519923.0140.3 19517.926.019723.241.819933.0144.5 19521.926.519736.244.419942.6148.2 19530.826.7197411.049.319952.8152.4 19540.726.919759.153.819963.0156.9 1955  0.4 26.819765.856.919972.3160.5 19561.527.219776.560.619981.6163.0 19573.328.119787.672.619992.2166.6 19582.828.9197911.365.220003.4172.2 19590.729.1198013.582.420012.8177.1 19601.729.6198110.390.920021.6179.9 19611.029.919826.296.520032.3184.0 19621.030.219833.299.620042.7188.9 19631.330.619844.3103.920053.4195.3 19641.331.019853.6107.620063.2201.6 19651.631.519861.9109.620072.8207.3 19662.932.419873.6113.620083.9215.3 19673.133.419884.1118.32009-0.4214.5 19684.234.819894.8124.020101.7218.1 19695.536.719905.4130.720113.1224.9 19705.738.819914.2136.220122.1229.6

19 19 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Throughout the last months of 2012 and into early 2013, as Republicans and Democrats argued over the federal budget, chain linking became a hot topic. The fixed-weight version of the consumer price index (CPI) is the one that is used to adjust social security benefits and veteran benefits to price changes. If the chain-linked CPI were used instead, benefits would tend to increase more slowly because in general, the chain-linked CPI increases less than does the fixed-weight CPI (because of product substitution). The nonpartisan Congressional Budget office estimated that if the chain-linked CPI were adopted, it would save the federal government about $145 billion over a ten year period from the lower benefits. E C O N O M I C S I N P R A C T I C E Chain-Linked Consumer Price Index in the News THINKING PRACTICALLY 1.Tax brackets are also tied to the fixed-weight CPI. How would tax revenue be affected if the chain-linked CPI were used instead?

20 20 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. During inflations, most prices—including input prices like wages—tend to rise together, and input prices determine both the incomes of workers and the incomes of owners of capital and land. So inflation by itself does not necessarily reduce ones purchasing power. The Costs of Inflation real interest rate The difference between the interest rate on a loan and the inflation rate. Inflation May Change the Distribution of Income One way of thinking about the effects of inflation on the distribution of income is to distinguish between anticipated and unanticipated inflation. The effects of anticipated inflation on the distribution of income are likely to be fairly small, since people and institutions will adjust to the anticipated inflation. Unanticipated inflation, on the other hand, may have large effects, depending, among other things, on how much indexing to inflation there is.

21 21 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. There may be costs associated even with anticipated inflation, such as the administrative cost associated with simply keeping up. Interest rates tend to rise with anticipated inflation. When interest rates are high, the opportunity costs of holding cash outside of banks is high. Economists have debated the seriousness of the costs of inflation for decades. No matter what its real economic cost, it makes us uneasy and unhappy. In 1974, President Ford verbalized some of this discomfort when he said, “Our inflation, our public enemy number one, will unless whipped destroy our country, our homes, our liberties, our property, and finally our national pride, as surely as any well-armed wartime enemy.” In this belief, our elected leaders have vigorously pursued policies designed to stop inflation. Administrative Costs and Inefficiencies Public Enemy Number One?

22 22 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. output growth The growth rate of the output of the entire economy. per-capita output growth The growth rate of output per person in the economy. productivity growth The growth rate of output per worker. Long-Run Growth

23 23 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Productivity grew much faster in the 1950s and 1960s than it has since. ▲ FIGURE 7.2 Output per Worker Hour (Productivity), 1952 I–2012 IV Output and Productivity Growth

24 24 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Capital per worker grew until about 1980 and then leveled off somewhat. ▲ FIGURE 7.3 Capital per Worker, 1952 I–2012 IV

25 25 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Looking Ahead This ends our introduction to the basic concepts and problems of macroeconomics. The first chapter of this part introduced the field; the second chapter discussed the measurement of national product and national income; and this chapter discussed unemployment, inflation, and long-run growth. We are now ready to begin the analysis of how the macroeconomy works.

26 26 of 27 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. consumer price index (CPI) cyclical unemployment discouraged-worker effect employed frictional unemployment labor force labor force participation rate natural rate of unemployment not in the labor force output growth per-capita output growth producer price indexes (PPIs) productivity growth real interest rate structural unemployment unemployed unemployment rate Equations: labor force = employed + unemployed population = labor force + not in labor force R E V I E W T E R M S A N D C O N C E P T S


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