Afternoon Must-Read: Rob Dent et al.: Measuring Labor Market Slack: Are the Long-Term Unemployed Different?

Rob Dent et al.: Measuring Labor Market Slack: Are the Long-Term Unemployed Different?: “There has been some debate…

…Krueger, Cramer, and Cho (2014) and Gordon (2013) about whether the short-term unemployment rate is a better measure of slack than the overall unemployment rate…. The two measures are sending different signals…. One can argue that the unemployment rate is exaggerating the extent of underutilization in the labor market, based on the premise that the long-term unemployed are, in practice, out of the labor force and likely to exert little pressure on earnings. If this is indeed the case, inflationary pressures might start building up sooner than suggested by the overall unemployment rate. In a three-part series, we study the available evidence on the long-term unemployed and argue against this premise. The long-term unemployed should not be excluded from measures of labor market slack…

November 17, 2014

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