Unemployment Determining the Natural Rate of Unemployment.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
8 Potential GDP and the Natural Unemployment Rate CHAPTER.
Advertisements

23 CHAPTER At Full Employment: The Classical Model.
Chapter 8 A roadmap ahead: So far we have studied how aggregate economic performance is defined and measured. In the next few chapters we will study the.
Chapter Six1 A PowerPoint  Tutorial to Accompany macroeconomics, 5th ed. N. Gregory Mankiw Mannig J. Simidian ® CHAPTER SIX Unemployment.
CHAPTER 6 The Medium Run CHAPTER 6 Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.
A Tour of the Labor Market
8 PART 3 Potential GDP and the Natural Unemployment Rate
Introduction to Macroeconomics Chapter 6 Unemployment and the Labor Market © Tancred Lidderdale
Search and Unemploy-ment
The Theory of Aggregate Demand Classical Model. Learning Objectives Understand the role of money in the classical model. Learn the relationship between.
15 Unemployment.
Unemployment, job creation and job destruction Chapter 3.
Chapter 17 Unemployment, Inflation, and Growth. 2 Introduction In Chapter 4, 5, 6, we have studied a classical model of the complete economy, but said.
New-Keynesian Theory of Aggregate Supply Efficiency Wages.
Macroeconomics Chapter 91 Capital Utilization and Unemployment C h a p t e r 9.
Unemployment.
The basic neoclassical model: Labour demand (1)
The Theory of Aggregate Supply
Ch. 17: Demand and Supply in Factor Markets Objectives – The firm’s choice of the quantities of labor and capital to employ. – People’s choices of the.
The Labor Market: The Medium Run
Unemployment. Learning Objectives To learn that unemployment is the natural consequence of labor force dynamics. To learn the differences between the.
Macroeconomy in the Long Run
UNEMPLOYMENT Society in general and Economists in particular are interested in the problem of unemployment because of its economic and non-economic effects.
Macroeconomics (ECON 1211) Lecturer: Dr B. M. Nowbutsing Topic: Unemployment.
15 Unemployment and Its Natural Rate. IDENTIFYING UNEMPLOYMENT Categories of Unemployment The problem of unemployment is usually divided into two categories.
Potential GDP and the Natural Unemployment Rate CHAPTER 24.
Macroeconomic Equilibrium Chapter 8. Potential GDP Potential GDP: the level of real GDP associated with full employment –sustainable upper limit of production.
1 The Labor Market: Wages … Prices … Wages Higher production requires an increase in employment Higher employment reduces unemployment Lower unemployment.
The Theory of Aggregate Supply Chapter 4. 2 The Theory of Production Representative Agent Economy: all output is produced from labor and capital and in.
The Theory of Aggregate Supply Classical Model. Learning Objectives Understand the determinants of output. Understand how output is distributed. Learn.
CHAPTER 6 © 2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Macroeconomics, 4/e Olivier Blanchard The Labor Market Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano.
Chapter 8 The Classical Long-Run Model Part 1 CHAPTER 1.
The Labor Market and Potential GDP The Supply of Labor –The quantity of labor supplied is the number of labor hours that all the households in the economy.
Chapter 6: Unemployment. Historical Data (US) Historical Data (EU)
Unemployment and Inflation
THE CAUSES & CATEGORIES OF UNEMPLOYMENT. OBJECTIVES: What are the three different types of unemployment? What factors determine the natural rate of unemployment?
Chapter 11 ©2010  Worth Publishers Unemployment and Inflation.
Lecture 2 After Mid A Tour of the Labor Market Population in virtual country million million Minus million million.
Copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1 Economics THIRD EDITION By John B. Taylor Stanford University.
MANKIW'S MACROECONOMICS MODULES
1 Macroeconomics Lecture 5 Unemployment (Mankiw: Macroeconomics, Chapter 5) Institute of Economic Theories - University of Miskolc Mónika Orloczki Assistant.
Macroeconomics I Lecture 9. October 2, 2007 Robert TCHAIDZE.
1 of 35 chapter: 8 >> Krugman/Wells ©2009  Worth Publishers Unemployment and Inflation.
Chapter 15: Job Search: External and Internal
The Labor Market Chapter 6. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved A tour of the Labor Market Noninstitutional civilian population:
The economy at Full Employment Lecture notes 4 Instructor: MELTEM INCE.
 Circular Flow of Income is a simplified model of the economy that shows the flow of money through the economy.
Class Slides for EC 204 Spring 2006 To Accompany Chapter 6.
THE NATURAL RATE OF UNEMPLOYMENT Chapter 26. Measuring Unemployment Unemployment is measured by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).  It surveys 60,000.
0 CHAPTER 6 Unemployment U P D A T E Chapter 6 Unemployment.
When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T Preview the aggregate supply-aggregate demand.
CHAPTER 9 The Economy at Full Employment CHAPTER 9 The Economy at Full Employment Chapter 26 in Economics Michael Parkin ECONOMICS 5e.
Unemployment Chapter 7. 2 Introduction Keynes first challenged the orthodox view that the economic system tends to return quickly to full-employment equilibrium.
1 ECON203 Principles of Macroeconomics Week 5 Topic: JOBS (EMPLOYMENT) versus UNEMPLOYMENT Dr. Mazharul Islam.
1 THE ECONOMY AT FULL EMPLOYMENT: THE CLASSICAL MODEL 8 CHAPTER.
© 2003 Prentice Hall Business PublishingMacroeconomics, 3/eOlivier Blanchard Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano 6 C H A P T E R The Medium.
Bringing in the Supply Side: Unemployment and Inflation? 10.
The Modern Approach to Aggregate Demand The Demand for Money and the LM Curve.
Unemployment Chapter 7. 2 ©1999 South-Western College Publishing Figure 7.1 The supply of labor is a flow into the labor market. Stock of unemployed The.
ECN 202: Principles of Macroeconomics Nusrat Jahan Lecture-4 Unemployment.
Income Distribution. Circular Flow The circular flow diagram shows that income to the resources comes from the resource markets. A person’s income depends.
ECON 2003 MACROECONOMICS 1 CHAPTER 6 UNEMPLOYMENT
Lesson 16-2 Inflation and Unemployment in the Long Run.
Chapter Unemployment 15. Identifying Unemployment How is unemployment measured? Employed – People who work Unemployed – Not employed Want to work Looking.
Business Cycles, Unemployment and Inflation. Business Cycle Economic fluctuations are irregular and unpredictable. –Fluctuations in the economy are often.
Unemployment Chapter #7. Introduction Unemployment & output are tightly linked – but not perfect Unemployment is a lagging economic indicator –Can be.
C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to Preview the aggregate supply-aggregate demand.
Job Search: External and Internal
Macroeconomics Chapter 9
Econ 101: Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory Larry Hu
Presentation transcript:

Unemployment Determining the Natural Rate of Unemployment

Learning Objectives To learn that unemployment is the natural consequence of labor force dynamics. To understand that the natural rate of unemployment is determined in part by the costs of employment turnover. To learn the differences between the various types of unemployment and the policy consequences of each.

Unemployment The unemployment rate is the number of unemployed people, expressed as a percentage of the labor force. –Labor Force = (Civilian non-institutional population over age 16 - People not in the labor force (students, homemakers, retirees, discouraged workers) –Unemployed = Labor force - People who are employed. –Unemployment rate = People who are unemployed/Labor force times 100

Natural Rate of Unemployment The natural rate of unemployment is the percentage of the labor force that can normally be expected to be unemployed for reasons other than cyclical fluctuations in real GDP. –The natural rate of unemployment is related to the willingness of workers to voluntarily separate from their jobs, job loss, the duration of unemployment periods, the rate of change in the pattern of demand, and changes in technology.

What Causes Unemployment? Frictional Unemployment –Job Search It takes time to match workers and jobs. Structural Unemployment –Skill Mismatch Unemployed workers’ skills do not match the needs of employers. –Location Mismatch Unemployed workers’ location do not match the location of the jobs.

What Causes Unemployment? Cyclical Unemployment –Real-Wage Rigidity The failure of wages to adjust, either rising or falling, until labor supply equals labor demand. Real wage rigidity can be caused by minimum wage laws, unions and collective bargaining, and efficiency wages.

New-Keynesian Theory of Unemployment Assumptions: –The firm recognizes that its pool of workers is a stock and that any given stock can be associated with fast or slow labor turnover. –The firm minimizes the costs of maintaining a stock of employees by adjusting the real wage. –The firm demands fewer workers as the real wage rises, so employment is a decreasing function of the real wage.

New-Keynesian Theory of Unemployment Assumptions: –The stock of workers sent to the labor market by households is the “labor force.” Households supply more workers when the real wage rises, so the labor force is an increasing function of the real wage.

New-Keynesian Theory of Unemployment The new-Keynesian theory differs from the classical theory in that the wage does not equate labor demand and labor supply. Rather, the wage is set at a point where there is still a pool of unemployed workers. This wage is called the efficiency wage and the level of unemployment associated with it is called the natural rate of unemployment.

Flows Through the Labor Market The supply of labor is a flow into the labor market. The demand for labor is a flow out of the labor market. Stock of Unemployed Unemployment is the stock of workers who are not matched with firms. Macroeconomics, Roger Farmer, p. 177

Efficiency Wage Theories High wages make workers more productive or efficient. –Firms are reluctant to cut wages despite an excess supply of labor because it would lower worker productivity. Higher wages reduce labor turnover. Average quality of a firm’s workforce depends on the wages paid. High wages improve worker effort.

w/P 0 E(w/P) LF (w/P)* NRU The labor force (LF) is an increasing function of the real wage. Employment, E(w/P), is a decreasing function of the real wage. The efficiency wage does not occur at the intersection of E(w/P) and LF. When the real wage equals the efficiency wage, unemployment is at its natural rate. E* LF* Employment and Labor Force New-Keynesian Theory of Unemployment

Turnover Cost and the Efficiency Wage Model Assumptions: –Firms must search for workers actively, but they may vary the intensity of their search. –Firms choose the wages they offer to minimize their wage bills, which are comprised of turnover costs and the real wage. One element of the wage bill is the real wage (w/P); the other element is the cost of recruiting new workers, C(w/P, L).

Turnover Cost and the Efficiency Wage Model Assumptions: –Turnover cost = C(w/P, L) = c(w/P)L Turnover cost, C, is a function of the real wage and employment. –The firm can influence C by offering a different real wage and/or by changing the number of workers it employs. C is inversely related to the real wage. –Better-paid workers are more likely to remain with the firm; thereby, lowering the firm’s turnover costs. The marginal benefit of an increase in the real wage equals the reduction in turnover cost for a given increase in the real wage. The marginal benefit decreases as the real wage increases.

Turnover Cost and the Efficiency Wage Model Assumptions continued: –Per worker turnover cost = c(w/P)L Turnover costs are proportional to the number of workers.

Choosing the Efficiency Wage Each firm chooses its wage rate to minimize the cost of maintaining a pool of employed workers. The firm’s profit function is:  = Y – w/P(L) – c(w/P)Lwhere  = Profit Y = Commodities supplied w/P(L) = Cost of labor demanded c(w/P)L = Turnover cost per worker

Choosing the Efficiency Wage Process for Choosing the Efficiency Wage 1. The firm minimizes costs per worker by choosing the efficiency wage that makes w/P + c(w/P) as small as possible. 2. Given the efficiency wage, the firm chooses its level of employment (L) to maximize profit.

Choosing the Efficiency Wage If the wage increases by one dollar, the firm’s wage bill increases by one dollar per worker. –This is the marginal cost of a change in the wage. If the wage increases by one dollar, the firm’s turnover cost decreases. –This is the marginal benefit of a change in the wage.

Choosing the Efficiency Wage MB=c(w/P) MC MB MC 0 w/P w/P* The efficiency wage equates the marginal benefit of increasing the real wage to its marginal cost.

Deriving the Efficiency Wage: Math c = 1 – 2(w/P) + (w/P) 2 –Turnover cost depends on the real wage. Note that as w/P increases, turnover cost falls* dc/(w/P) = – (– 2 + 2(w/P)) –The marginal benefit is the slope of the cost function. We use the negative because the negative of a cost is a benefit. Note that the marginal benefit falls as the real wage rises. Marginal cost = 1. *Where w/P is assumed to be 1, c = 0

Deriving the Efficiency Wage: Math Costs are minimized at the real wage where marginal benefit equals marginal cost. –Marginal benefit = – (– 2 + 2(w/P)) –Marginal cost = 1. 1 = 2 –2(w/P) (1 – 2)/ – 2 = w/P ½ = w/P

Choosing a Stock of Workers The firm pays a real wage and a turnover cost for each worker. –The additional cost means that at every real wage the firm hires fewer workers than would be predicted in the classical model.

Choosing a Stock of Workers 0 w/P E LDCLDC EW L D C represents the classical labor wage to the marginal product of labor. EW represents the efficiency wage employment curve. It equates the real wage to the marginal product of labor minus the turnover cost.

Choosing a Stock of Workers 0 w/P E LDCLDC EW E* E C The gap between L D C and EW is turnover cost. It is smaller when the real wage is higher because for a high real wage, the turnover cost is lower. E C represents employment in the classical model. E* represents employment in the efficiency wage model.

Deriving the Labor Demand Curve: Math  = L D – (1/2)(L D ) 2 – (w/P)L D – c(w/P)L D where Profit =  The production function = L D – (1/2)(L D ) 2 The wage bill = (w/P)L D Turnover cost = c(w/P)L D

Deriving the Labor Demand Curve: Math c = 1 – 2(w/P) + (w/P) 2  w/P = ½ so c = ¼ Marginal product = 1 – L D To maximize profit, the firm equates marginal product to the real wage plus turnover cost. 1 – L D = (w/P) + c(w/P) = ½ + ¼ = ¾ L D = 1 – ¾ = ¼

w/P 0 E(w/P) LF (w/P)* NRU At equilibrium, the efficiency wage, (w/P)*, is chosen to maximize profits. When the real wage equals the efficiency wage, the natural rate of unemployment is the difference between the labor force and the quantity of employment. E* LF* Employment and Labor Force New-Keynesian Theory of Unemployment

Deriving the Natural Rate of Unemployment: Math L S = w/P = ½ –where L S = labor supply w/P = the real wage The natural rate of unemployment, U*, is given by the difference between demand and supply. –U* = ½ – ¼ = ¼