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ECO 120 Macroeconomics Week 10 Unemployment & Inflation Lecturer Dr. Rod Duncan Topics • Definition of unemployment. • Types of unemployment. • Costs of unemployment. • Definition of inflation. • Types of inflation. • Impacts of inflation. • Relationship between unemployment and inflation- the Phillips Curve. Unemployment A person becomes unemployed if he or she is a: •Job loser •Job leaver •New entrant or re-entrant into the labour force He or she is no longer unemployed if: •Hired or recalled •Withdraws from the labour force Population Working age population Labour Force Employed / Unemployed Labour Force Participation Rate Unemployment Rate Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR) Proportion of country’s population that takes part in its economic activities directly (either actually taking part or willing to) ( Labour Force / Working Age Population ) X LFPR In Australia, in September 2003 : ( 10.237 million / 15.955 million ) x 100 = 64.2 % 100 Unemployment Rate (UR) Proportion of country’s labour force that is unemployed. ( Number Unemployed / Labour Force ) UR in Australia, in September 2003 : (0.591 million / 10.237 million) x 100 = 5.8% X 100 Unemployment over the Business Cycle (1965- 1995) 12 10 Unemployment 8 6 4 2 0 Change in GDP -2 -4 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 Labour Force Participation by Sex at Ages 35-44 100 Participation rate (%) 90 Males 80 70 60 50 Females 40 30 20 10 0 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1994 1995 SEP.2003 JAN.2003 MAY.2002 SEP.2001 JAN.2001 MAY.2000 SEP.1999 JAN.1999 MAY.1998 SEP.1997 JAN.1997 MAY.1996 SEP.1995 JAN.1995 MAY.1994 SEP.1993 JAN.1993 MAY.1992 SEP.1991 JAN.1991 MAY.1990 SEP.1989 JAN.1989 MAY.1988 SEP.1987 JAN.1987 MAY.1986 5 SEP.1985 JAN.1985 35 MAY.1984 SEP.1983 JAN.1983 MAY.1982 SEP.1981 JAN.1981 MAY.1980 SEP.1979 Unemployment rate (%) Unemployment Analysis - Australia : June 1979 - September 2003 40 Aged 15-19 looking for full-time work 30 25 20 15 Total Unemployment 10 Aged 20 & over seeking full-time work 0 Types of Unemployment Cyclical unemployment Frictional (or search) unemployment Structural (technological) unemployment Cyclical Unemployment Associated with the ups and downs of the business cycle • Takes place due to insufficient aggregate demand or total spending- reflects shifts in AD curve. • High during recessions and low during booms. • Fiscal and monetary policies can reduce cyclical unemployment - policies are relevant. Frictional Unemployment Associated with the period of time in which people are searching for jobs, being interviewed and waiting to commence duties. •It is inevitable and always exist •Fiscal and monetary policies can not reduce frictional unemployment – macroeconomic policies are irrelevant. •Policies that make it easier to find new jobs will affect frictional unemployment. Structural Unemployment Associated with wider structural or technological changes in the economy that may make some jobs redundant. • It is inevitable and always exist • Lasts longer than frictional unemployment • Fiscal and monetary policies can not reduce structural unemployment – macroeconomic policies are irrelevant. • Policies that encourage workers to retrain skills or to move to a new area with more jobs will decrease structural unemployment. Full Employment • Full employment means when all productive resources in the economy are in full use - implies no cyclical unemployment - still frictional and structural unemployment exist - they can be low - but can never be zero. • The full-employment rate of unemployment is called the natural rate of unemployment • equals the sum of frictional and structural unemployment • cyclical unemployment = zero • Domestic output consistent with the natural rate of unemployment is potential output or full employment level of GDP Other Employment Issues • Part-time employment - very high in Australia in recent years. • Discouraged workers or the “hidden unemployed” • Those who become discouraged and drop out of the labour force temporarily - would return if a suitable job prospect arose • Discourage workers, participation rate and the unemployment rate Cost of Unemployment • Economic cost • output foregone, measured in terms of the loss of potential GDP - Okun’s law quantifies the relationship between the unemployment rate and the GDP gap - for every 1% of unemployment (over the natural rate) 3.5% of GDP loss in Australia. • Underemployment • High budget costs • Social Costs • Increase in crime rate, abuse etc. • Physical & mental illness • Unlikely to develop work ethics Classical Employment Theory Economy always operates under full employment - it is automatic and self sustaining - if there is any unemployment that is only temporary Price-wage flexibility the assumption that all prices, including wages and interest rates, are flexible and will, rapidly adjust to remove disequilibria Classical theory and laissez faire the price system ensured that price-wage flexibility and fluctuations in the interest rate was capable of maintaining full employment AD-AS in the Classical Theory •Vertical aggregate supply curve exclusively determines level of real domestic output •Stable down-sloping aggregate demand exclusively determines price level Classical View of Unemployment Price Level ASLR = AS P1 P2 AD1 AD2 Q1 Real Domestic Output Keynesian View of AD - AS •Full employment is not automatic - unemployment exists for longer periods - the Great Depression of the 1930s sticky wages and prices. •Horizontal aggregate supply curve during recession ‘recessionary’ or ‘Keynesian’ range Change in AD impacts on unemployment - not on price level. •Once the full employment level is reached - vertical AS curve - change in AD affects price level only. •Unstable aggregate demand - especially investment demand management and stabilisation policies by the government are essential Keynesian View of Unemployment Price Level ASLR P1 AS AD1 AD2 Q2 Q1 Real Domestic Output Inflation • We measure the general price level through a price index such as the Consumer Price Index (CPI) • Inflation is a continuous rise in the general price level Inflation rate = Current year index - Previous year index x Previous year index 100 Inflation in Australia (1970-2003) 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 Types of Inflation • Demand-Pull Inflation • Cost-Push Inflation Demand-Pull Inflation • Occurs when an increase in AD pulls up the price level • Excess demand for output - increase in AD - AD shifts rightward - AS does not change in the short run movement along the AS curve - price level increases GDP increases • In the longer run, workers will realise their real wages have fallen and will demand and receive increased nominal wages - lower profit level - supply decreases causing the AS to shift to the left - GDP declines - price level increases further - only inflation • May be caused by expansionary fiscal and monetary policies - can be cured by contractionary policies. Demand-Pull Inflation - Short run Price Level ASLR AS1 P2 b P1 a An increase in aggregate demand.... Increases the price level and output in the short run AD2 AD1 o Q1 Real GDP Price Level Demand-Pull Inflation - Long run ASLR AS1 P3 c P2 b P1 a A decrease in aggregate supply.... Increases the price level and output returns to original level AD2 AD1 o Q1 Q2 Real GDP Cost-Push Inflation • Occurs when an increase in the cost of production at each price level shifts the AS curve leftward resulting in increased prices • Short-run: Increased prices and decreased real output (and more unemployment) • Wage push : increase in wage rate - power of trade unions • Supply shocks - increase in prices of major raw materials - oil etc. • Profit push : increase in profit requirement of large monopoly businesses. Cost-Push Inflation ASLR AS2 Price Level AS1 b P2 P1 a Cost-push inflation occurs when aggregate supply shifts left.... Causing a higher price level AD1 o Real GDP Q1 Cost-Push Inflation and Demand Management • Government intervention (AD): If government intervenes to increase AD an inflationary spiral will result • No Government intervention (AD): If government does not intervene to increase AD severe recession will result, however nominal wages will eventually decline and will restore AS to original position Cost-Push Inflation ASLR AS2 Price Level AS1 P3 b c P2 P1 An attempt to increase AD will only further increase the price level a AD1 o Real GDP Q1 Q2 Stagflation • Simultaneous experience of high and increasing unemployment and inflation - costpush inflation. • Caused by : • Aggregate supply shocks such as severe increases in fuel costs, and devaluations • Productivity decline • Inflationary expectations and wages expectations about the likely future path and rate of increase of the general price level Types of Inflation in Australia • 1973-74 : Cost push - caused by international oil price rise. • 1979 : cost-push - caused by international oil price rise. • 1981-82 : cost push - caused by rapidly rising wages. In early 1993, RBA announced its policy of inflation targeting - 2% - 3% a year - initially caused a recession & rise in unemployment Impacts of Inflation • Anticipated (expected) and unanticipated (unexpected) inflation. • Anticipated inflation is not a big problem economy adjusts automatically. • Unanticipated inflation redistributes income between : • employers and employees • lenders and borrowers Phillips Curve • Suggests an inverse relationship (or a trade-off) between inflation and the unemployment rate • Named after A W Phillips who originally discovered the relationship between unemployment and nominal wages, using British data in 1950s. • In general, inflation is associated with economic expansion and unemployment with economic recession. • During expansion : the greater the rate of growth of AD - inflation is high - unemployment is low. • During recession : the slower the rate of growth of AD - inflation is low - unemployment is high. The Phillips Curve Annual rate of inflation (percent) 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Unemployment rate (percent) Implications of Phillips Curve • Trade-off suggests : a rise in inflation should lead to a decline in unemployment, and vice versa. • In general, both can not be brought down to the minimum level. • The society must make a choice between low inflation and low unemployment. Phillips Curve in Australia 18 16 14 12 1977 10 1983 8 6 4 2 0 -2 0 1970 1993 2 4 6 8 2003 10 12 Shifting Phillips Curve • The smooth relationship may not be valid in the long-run - Conflicts with the trade-offs embodied in the Phillips Curve • Vertical Phillips Curve - at full employment level, only price level changes • Simultaneous high and increasing unemployment and inflation - may lead to shifts in the curve