ECON 110 Chapter Notes - Chapter 31: Frictional Unemployment, Nairu, Nominal Rigidity

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ECON 110 Full Course Notes
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Canadian employment and the canadian labour force increased along a strong upward trend throughout the 20th century: the unemployment rate fluctuates significantly over the course of the business cycle. Together, frictional unemployment and structural unemployment make up the nairu: the actual unemployment rate is equal to the nairu when real gdp is equal to y* There is a long-standing debate among economists regarding the causes of unemployment fluctuations. Market-clearing theories look to explanations that allow the labour market to be cleared continuously by perfectly flexible wages and prices: such theories can explain cyclical variations in employment but predict no involuntary unemployment. Empirical evidence suggests that wages are relatively stable over the business cycle, in contrast to what is predicted by market-clearing theories of the labour market. Non-market-clearing theories of the labour market provide an explanation for involuntary unemployment based on wage stickiness: real wages do not adjust frequently in response to all shocks to labour demand and supply.

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