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Economics of Employment and unemployment from the Islamic Perspective IDsB/IRTI Video-Conferencing DLP Introduction • The importance of employment economics cannot be overstated – employment is the immediate means of livelihood in human societies. • Unemployment, on the other hand, is the gateway to poverty and social unrest - unless it is aggressively attacked through appropriate policy. • Nonetheless, employment economics in the Islamic perspective has remained overshadowed by research in Islamic banking and financial economics – why?. • Admittedly, riba elimination lies at the heart of Islamic economics, whereas Islamic labour contracts are similar to their mainstream counterparts. • Yet, riba elimination should be viewed as an integral part of an equitable macroeconomic strategy that takes full employment targets and job security as top priorities. • More research is needed to project riba elimination into practical employment strategies. Introduction • • • • The objective of this lecture is to shed light on salient theoretical features of free market labour economics with relevant Islamic implications. Due to time constraint, attention will be focused on the impact of riba elimination on employment although there definitely more about employment from an Islamic perspective. Again, we cannot introduce all real and monetary macroeconomic variables that affect the theory of employment. Two models will suffice for the current objective: 1. Neoclassical equilibrium model of the labour market 2. Kenynesian model of labour market disequilibrium. Basic definitions • Adults in the working age are normally classified three broad groups as – Employed (E) – Unemployed (UE) – Not in the labour force (NLF) • Hence, the Labour Force (LF) consists of E+UE • LF Participation Rate at any point of time is the percentage of the population of working age who declare themselves to be in the LF • In practice this may not be an adequate measure of the true situation PR in the labour market. Types of UE • Frictional UE: an irreducible minimum level of UE in a dynamic economy = people in shifting times between jobs. • Structural UE: caused by changes in the structural long term pattern of demand and production – thereby affecting mismatch of skills and job opportunities. • Demand-deficient UE: This is the Keynesian UE where actual aggregate demand falls short of the full employment aggregate demand – wages and prices have not yet adjusted to restore full employment. • Classical UE: where wage rates are held artificially above the full employment equilibrium – trade union power or minimum wage rate legislation. Model- I Neoclassical Equilibrium model • The first model measures represents real wage (w) on the vertical axis and number of workers (N) on the horizontal axis. • Then the following schedules are drawn: • Labour Demand (LD) schedule: firms takes on more workers at lower wages. • Labour Force (LF) schedule: workers willing to be in the labour force at each real wage ( upwards sloping). • Workers Accepting Job offers (AJ) : this schedule lies to the left of LF because some LF members are between jobs and that some optimists hang on for an even better wage rate. Model- I Full Employment and the Natural rate of Unemployment • Full employment level is the equilibrium level (Nnatural rate of unemployment (ne) is the difference N1- N* • Thus *) at real wage rate ( w* )where LD intersects with LD. • The size of LF at this equilibrium is N1. • The, the natural rate of unemployment is the rate of unemployment when the labour market is in equilibrium. • This is entirely voluntary- including frictional unemployment and structural unemployment. Model- I Involuntary Unemployment • Suppose trade unions maintained the real wage rate at w2 well above the full employment wage rate w*. • This depresses employment level to N2 and unemployment now becomes bigger N2- N1 • Individual workers willing to work at w2 cannot find work – therefore this is involuntary UE. • Yet, from the viewpoint of workers’ collective action, this is voluntary UE- the classical version of voluntary UE. Neo-classical equilibrium model Full employment, the natural rate of UE and the interest rate • Movement along the LD depends on real wage, but the position of the LD depends, among other things, on the rate of interest. • A rise in the interest rate causes LD to shift backwards towards the origin – reducing N* • A fall in interest rate causes LD to shift forwards – raising the level of employment • Hence, in an interest-free economy, more labour force will accept job offers and fewer workers will be ‘naturally’ unemployed. Employment and natural UE in an interest-free economy. Model-II Keynesian demand deficient UE • The Keynesian theory is a disequilibrium model of involuntary unemployment – the economy has not fully adjusted to the new level of aggregate demand. • The basic model consists of • 45-degree Aggregate Supply curve: – Aggregate expenditure = aggregate income. • AD = Aggregate Demand function Private consumption ( C ) + private investment (I0) • Income level ( Y0 ) is below the full employment income level. Model-II Keynesian Demand-Deficient UE Model – II in an interest free economy • Investment expenditure in inversely related to the interest rate • Hence, a rise in the interest rate will reduce investment and hence aggregate demand, leading to an even lower level of output. • Conversely, in an interest-free economy, rise in investment will recover the deficient aggregate demand towards full employment. • Compare The impact of I1 with that of I0 Model-II in an interest-free economy