New Evidence on Cyclical and Structural Sources of Unemployment
Author/Editor: Bharat Trehan, Jinzhu Chen, Prakash Kannan, Prakash Loungani
Release Date: © May, 2011
ISBN
: 978-1-45526-041-6
Stock #: WPIEA2011106
English
Stock Status: On back-order
Languages and formats available
| English | French | Spanish | Arabic | Russian | Chinese | Portuguese | |
| Paperback | Yes | ||||||
| Yes |
Description
We provide cross-country evidence on the relative importance of cyclical and structural factors in explaining unemployment, including the sharp rise in U.S. long-term unemployment during the Great Recession of 2007-09. About 75% of the forecast error variance of unemployment is accounted for by cyclical factors-real GDP changes (?Okun‘s Law?), monetary and fiscal policies, and the uncertainty effects emphasized by Bloom (2009). Structural factors, which we measure using the dispersion of industry-level stock returns, account for the remaining 25 percent. For U.S. long-term unemployment the split between cyclical and structural factors is closer to 60-40, including during the Great Recession.
Taxonomy
Business cycles , Economic development
More publications in this series: Working Papers
More publications by: Bharat Trehan ; Jinzhu Chen ; Prakash Kannan ; Prakash Loungani
