Chapter 8: Q.9 (page 214)
How do you calculate the unemployment rate? How do you calculate the labor force participation rate?
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Chapter 8: Q.9 (page 214)
How do you calculate the unemployment rate? How do you calculate the labor force participation rate?
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Is it desirable to pursue a goal of zero
unemployment? Why or why not?
What type of unemployment (cyclical, frictional,
or structural) applies to each of the following:
a. landscapers laid off in response to a drop in new housing construction during a recession.
b. coal miners laid off due to EPA regulations that shut down coal fired power
c. a financial analyst who quits his/her job in
Chicago and is pursing similar work in Arizona
d. printers laid off due to drop in demand for printed catalogues and flyers as firms go the internet to promote an advertise their products.
e. factory workers in the U.S. laid off as the plants shut down and move to Mexico and Ireland.
What are some of the problems with using the unemployment rate as an accurate measure of overall joblessness?
Is it desirable to eliminate natural unemployment?
Why or why not? Hint: Think about what our economy would look like today and what assumptions would have to be met to have a zero rate of natural unemployment.
Over the long term, has the U.S. unemployment rate generally trended up, trended down, or remained at basically the same level?
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