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Economics 102 Homework #3 Due: February 15th at the beginning of class Complete all of the problems. Please do not write your answers on this sheet. Show all of your work. 1. Suppose the U.S. adult non-institutionalized population is 325 million people. The labor force participation rate is 82%. There are 40 million people unemployed, and 10 million people are considered discouraged workers. a. Calculate the number of people in the labor force, the number of people employed, and the unemployment rate. In order to find the size of the labor force, we need to use the following Labor Force equation: LFPR = * 100 . Inserting the number from the Adult Population Labor Force * 100 , or Labor Force = 0.82*325 million, so the problem: 82% = 325 million Labor Force = 266.5 million. # of Employed = Labor Force - # of Unemployed: # of Employed = 266.5 mm – 40 mm = 226.5 million. Use the following formula: Unemployment rate = Unemployment Rate = # of Unemployed *100 , Labor Force 40 million *100 = 15.0%. 266.5 million b. Would lowering unemployment to 0% be a good goal for the U.S. economy? If not suggest an alternative goal that relates to unemployment. Explain your ideas (Hint: think about frictional, structural and cyclical unemployment). If the unemployment rate was 0%, that means that every person who wanted a job had one. In one sense this would be good. However, if there was no one looking for work then when a firm wanted to hire another worker they would have to hire them away from their current job. This would cause wages to rise, but that might not be a good thing. In order to have 0% unemployment, every college graduate would have to start working immediately upon graduation and no one could ever be fired. Allowing graduates a little time to search for the perfect job is probably a good thing. A better goal for the U.S. economy would be to try to eliminate structural unemployment. Structural unemployment occurs because the labor market is not in equilibrium. If wages are pushed artificially high, then some workers will lose their jobs. If the government could intervene in the labor market in order to keep it in equilibrium this would be a good way to lower unemployment. You could also argue that the government intervening in the labor market would only make things worse, so this is not a very good idea either. Another possibility is for the government to try and reduce frictional unemployment. If the government could figure out a way to better match unemployed people with available jobs, so that time between jobs was reduced, this would help to lower unemployment. Also the government could provide training for workers that were laid off. This training would help them to be qualified for more different jobs, which should reduce the amount of time they spend unemployed. A third goal might be to try and increase the Labor Force Participation Rate (LFPR). If the LFPR were higher that would mean that more people were in the work force, so we might have more people working even though unemployment did not decrease. The down side of this goal would be that the people already in the labor force who are unable to find jobs, would have even more difficultly due to the increased competition. c. Currently discouraged workers are not counted as unemployed. Do you think this is the proper way to treat people who would work if given the chance? Explain your answer. Whether or not discouraged workers should be counted as unemployed is still a subject of debate, so there is no right or wrong answer to this question. The interesting thing to note is that if we include discouraged workers as part of the unemployed, then the unemployment rate will increase. So if we want unemployment statistics to look better, we will put discouraged workers in the Not in the Labor Force category. 2. The following is actual data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (numbers in 000’s): Data for U.S. non-institutionalized, age 16 and over. 1997 2000 Population 202,285 211,410 Labor Force 135,456 142,279 LFPR 67.3% 67.0% # Employed 128,298 136,588 # Unemployed 7,158 5,691 # Not in LF 66,829 69,131 Unemp. Rate 4.0% 5.28% 2003 219,897 145,943 66.4% 137,421 8,522 73,954 5.84% 2006 227,458 150,122 66.0% 143,066 7,056 77,336 4.7% a. Fill in the blanks in the above chart. b. What trends do you notice in the data? What might these trends mean? There are a couple of trends. We can see that population is steadily increasing over the period. This is not surprising at all, at the same time the number of people in the labor force is also increasing over time. However, the LFPR rises a little in 2000, then declines by over 1%. This is a fairly significant decline. To see why let’s look at what the size of the labor force would be if the LFPR was the same as in 2000. If there was not the decline in the LFPR then would be almost 3 million additional members in the work force in 2006. If all of the 3 million potential workers were discouraged workers, then the 2006 unemployment rate is vastly understated. So, what are some possible reasons for the drop in LFPR. One possibility is the aging of the population. As the baby boomers begin to retire, the number of retired people in the population may be increasing on a percentage basis. Alternatively, the change could be because discouraged workers are dropping out of the labor force. A third possibility is that more families are returning to one income families, causing women to drop out of the labor force. A final possibility is that more younger potential workers are staying in school for longer periods of time, thus make the labor force participation rate fall. We can also see that the unemployment rate is going up and down and up and down. This lends evidence to the theory that there is a natural rate of unemployment that the measured unemployment rate fluctuates around. If the natural rate of unemployment were 5.0%, then this is exactly the pattern of unemployment that we would expect. Data for U.S. non-institutionalized, age 16 - 19. 1997 2000 Population 15,318 15,987 Labor Force 7,930 8,345 LFPR 52.2% 51.8% # Employed 6,595 7,285 # Unemployed 1,335 1,060 # Not in LF 7,642 7,388 Unemp. Rate 12.7% 16.8% 2003 16,028 7,362 45.9% 6,096 1,266 8,666 17.2% 2006 16,515 7,178 43.5% 6,090 1,088 9,337 15.2% c. Fill in the above table which contains data for teenagers. d. Are the trends in the teenage data similar or different from the entire adult population? Specifically, which things move in the same direction and which move in the opposite direction? Also comment on whether the size of the changes is the same. The overall trends are similar, as would be expected, because this is a subset of the above chart. One significant difference is that the number of people in the labor force actually falls. This leads to a large decline in the LFPR. We can use this to figure out that more than half of the decline in LFPR seen among the entire working population came from teenagers. This is significant, because if the decline in the LFPR for all ages is due to an increase in discouraged workers, then we have a hidden problem. But if the decline is simply due to the fact that more teenagers are choosing to go to college, we don’t need to worry. There is also a much larger fluctuation in the unemployment rate, which will be discussed in part e. e. Compare the unemployment rates among all workers, with the rate among teenagers. Is the difference something you would expect? Why? A much higher percentage of teenagers are unemployed compared to the overall population of workers. If we removed the teenage population from the numbers in the first chart, the unemployment rate would be even lower, and the difference would be starker. There are two main reasons why the unemployment rate is higher among teenagers. The first is that teenagers have less education and thus fewer skills. This means there is a smaller number of jobs open to them. Additionally, teenagers have little work experience. This makes them the first ones to be fired when a firm is downsizing, and the last to be hired when a firm is expanding. f. Offer a possible explanation for the trend in teenage labor force participation. Teenagers have been dropping out of the labor force at a pretty high rate. They may be dropping out for two reasons. The first is that if the wealth of the nation as a whole is increasing, as it has been, fewer teenagers need to work to help support their families. This allows them to stay at home and play/study. Second, if a larger proportion of teenagers are deciding to get a post-secondary education there will be fewer participating in the labor force because full time students count as being not in the labor force. Note: Be careful to understand the distinction between parts e and f. Lots of people confused reasons teenagers are unemployed, with reasons they dropped out of the labor force. These are two separate and independent issues.