Lect 9
Lect 9
Population Survey
The U.S. Census Bureau conducts monthly surveys to
determine the status of the labor force in the United
States.
The population is divided into two groups:
The working-age population—the number of people
aged 16 years and older who are not in jail, hospital, or
other institution.
People too young to work (less than 16 years of age) or
in institutional care.
Jobs and Wages
Aggregate Hours
Aggregate hours are the total number of hours worked by
all workers during a year.
Aggregate hours have increased since 1960 but less
rapidly than the total number of workers because the
average workweek has shortened.
Jobs and Wages
Aggregate Hours
Figure 5.5 shows
aggregate hours...
Jobs and Wages
Aggregate Hours
Figure 5.5 shows
aggregate hours …
and average weekly hours
per person, 1961–2001.
Jobs and Wages
The duration of
unemployment increases
during recessions.
Figure 5.9 shows
unemployment by
duration close to a
business cycle peak in
2000…
… and close to a trough
in 1992.
Unemployment and Full Employment
Types of Unemployment
Unemployment can be classified into three types:
Frictional
Structural
Cyclical
Unemployment and Full Employment
Types of Unemployment
Frictional unemployment is unemployment that arises
from normal labor market turnover.
The creation and destruction of jobs requires that
unemployed workers search for new jobs.
Increases in the number of young people entering the
labor force and increases in unemployment benefit
payments raise frictional unemployment.
Unemployment and Full Employment
Types of Unemployment
Structural unemployment is unemployment created by
changes in technology and foreign competition that
change the match between the skills necessary to perform
jobs and the locations of jobs, and the skills and location of
the labor force.
Cyclical unemployment is the fluctuation in
unemployment caused by the business cycle.
Unemployment and Full Employment
Full Employment
Full employment occurs when there is no cyclical
unemployment or, equivalently, when all unemployment is
frictional or structural.
Unemployment and Full Employment
Measuring Inflation
The main purpose of the CPI is to measure inflation.
The inflation rate is the percentage change in the price
level from one year to the next.
The inflation formula is:
Inflation rate = [(CPI this year – CPI last year)/CPI last
year] × 100.
The Consumer Price Index
Figure 5.13 shows the CPI and the inflation rate, 1971–
2001.
The Consumer Price Index
New goods bias New goods that were not available in the
base year appear and, if they are more expensive than the
goods they replace, the price level may be biased higher.
Similarly, if they are cheaper than the goods they replace,
but not yet in the CPI basket, they bias the CPI upward.
Quality change bias Quality improvements generally are
neglected, so quality improvements that lead to price hikes
are considered purely inflationary.
The Consumer Price Index
.
The bias in the CPI distorts private contracts, increases
government outlays (close to a third of government outlays
are linked to the CPI), and biases estimates of real
earnings.
To reduce the bias in the CPI, the BLS will undertake
consumer expenditure surveys more frequently and revise
the CPI basket every two years.
MONITORING
CYCLES, JOBS, AND
THE PRICE LEVEL
THE
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