Unemployment
Econ 105C
- The Employment Report
- Causes of Unemployment
- Natural Rate of Unemployment
- Policies that Affect the Natural Unemployment Rate
- Wage Rigidity
The Employment Report
- Survey of 60k households that is released monthly, gives approximation of state of unemployment
- Gives information such as demographics, size of labor force, etc.
- Influences monetary policy decisions
Causes of Unemployment
- Workers change jobs: career changes, geographic preferences, want new employer, etc.
- Firms’ labor needs change: demand for firm’s product changes, technology changes, etc.
- As a result, there will always be some unemployment, and this is known as frictional unemployment
- Sectoral shifts are changes in composition of demand across industries, such as the increasing demand for computers after technology got better
Natural Rate of Unemployment
- The rate of unemployment to which the economy has a tendency to converge over time; “equilibirum rate”
- Can vary based on recessions or booms
- Notation for rate of unemployment
- L = # of workers in labor force (L = E + U)
- E = # of employed workers
- U = # of unemployed workers
- U/L = unemployment rate
- s = job separation rate: the fraction of employed workers that become separated from their jobs in a given month
- f = job finding rate: the fraction of employed workers that find a job in a given month
- There are two “flows” present; sE represents workers losing jobs (E -> U) and fU represents workers finding jobs (U -> E)
- The steady-state represents the natural unemployment rate
Policies that Affect the Natural Unemployment Rate
- Policies that reduce the rate either lower s or increase f
- Lowering the natural rate of unemployment is not necessarily desirable
- e.g. eliminating unemployment insurance does lower the unemployment rate, but it also makes quality of jobs and QoL for workers worse
Unemployment Insurance
- Pays part of a worker’s wages for a limited time after losing their job
- Increases the natural unemployment rate because it reduces f; workers are less encouraged to find work
- Big reason why the natural unemployment rate in EU is greater than in the US; high levels of UI
- Benefits include better job matches, leading to greater productivity in the economy and higher incomes for workers
Other Government Policies
- Government employment agencies: Provide info about job openings to match workers and jobs
Wage Rigidity
- Wages are rigid if they are restricted from adjusting in response to changes in supply and demand
- Examples include minimum wage laws, union contracts, efficiency wages, etc.
- In a perfect world with flexible wages, employment will respond perfectly if wage are too high or low
- Due to wage rigidity, there will always be some people who are unemployed because wages can’t change
- Downward nominal wage rigidity can lead to unemployment when there is a negative demand shock
Minimum Wage
- One source of wage rigidity is minimum wage; the wages for some jobs become too high, so companies don’t create positions for those jobs which leads to unemployment
- Minimum wage doesn’t apply to most groups of workers, but it does contribute somewhat to the unemployment rate
- Difficult to find solid evidence to connect minimum wage laws to unemployment
- Some evidence that teenagers are hurt and low-wage older workers benefit
Union Contracts
- Unions use their labor market power to get higher wages and benefits for their workers
- Unions specify wages which leads to wage rigidity
- Leads to insiders vs. outsiders problem
- Union workers, or insiders, want to keep wages high
- Unemployed non-union workers, or outsiders, want to get any job but can’t get one because the wages are too high
- High wages lead to outsiders remaining unemployed
Efficiency Wages
- Firms might pay its workers a higher-than-market wage
- Reduces turnover and training costs
- Increases worker loyalty and effort
- Reduces shirking
- Also causes outsiders to remain unemployed because the firm cannot hire workers at the same wage
Social Norms Against Nominal Wage Cuts
- Firms cannot cut the wages of workers due to social norms, so instead they fire them