Unemployment Flashcards

1
Q

define unemployment

A

unemployment consists of those of working age who are willing and able to work, actively seeking a job, but who do not have a job

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2
Q

what is working age

A

16 - 64

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3
Q

what is the labour force survey

A

a massive survey conducted by the ONS, from the survey the ONS can work out the number of employed and unemployed people

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4
Q

maning of inactive ppl

A

people who are of working age but are not willing to work

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5
Q

unemployment rate equation

A

unemployed/ econmically active x 100

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6
Q

what is the claimant count

A

the total number of people claiming unemployment benefits

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7
Q

issues with the claimant count

A
  • difficult to compare between countries, eg, some countries mightt not even have unemployment benefits
  • not every unemployed person will claim unemployment benefits
  • not every unemployed person CAN claim unemployment benefits
    • therefore the figure will always be lower than LFS
  • could be subject to fraud
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8
Q

issues with the labour force survey

A
  • sampling size - only 40,000 people are interviewed, very small sample of the working age population (40 million)
  • it is expensive to conduct the survey and collect data
  • discouraged workers, “hidden unemployed”, may give up seeking a job so will not be included in the unemployment figures
  • inactive groups - carers, ppl who are reliant on their spouses income, could be of working age but won’t be counted as they don’t fit the definition
  • margin of error for unemployment in the UK is 1-3%, quite high
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9
Q

what is the margin of error for unemployment

A

plus it minus 3%

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10
Q

what are monetary policies

A

a demand side policy which involves changes to the interest rates, money supply and exchange rate by the central bank in order to change AD

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11
Q

what is expansionary monetary policy

A

attempts to use monetary policy to boost AD, eg by lowering interest rates

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12
Q

what is contractionary monetary policy

A

attempts to use monetary policy to reduce AD

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13
Q

why would central banks use expansionary monetary policy

A
  • to boost AD and raise demand pull inflation and hitting all macroeconomic targets
  • increase growth
  • reduce unemployment
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14
Q

why would central banks use contractionary monetary policy

A
  • to hit inflation target, eg if inflation is beyond the target and making macroeconomic stability
  • to prevent excessive house prices and to prevent credit bubbles
  • reducing excess debt and promoting savings
    -reduce current account deficit, AD falls, growth falls, income falls, lowering amount spent on imports
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15
Q

interest rates will feed through a transmission mechanism, what does this mean

A

an interest rate cut by the central bank will work through various channels, affecting a variety of variables in the AD equation as it hits the real economy

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16
Q

chain of analysis for expansionary monetary policies

A
  • cutting interest rates - lower borrowing costs for consumers, makes it cheaper for consumers to borrow, incentivises consumption, decentives saving, boosts spending in the economy
    - interest rates on saving accounts could fall in the economy, reduces incentive to save, boosts consumption in AD
  • mortgage rates fall, households pay less money to rent
17
Q
A
18
Q
A
19
Q

what are the types of unemployment which fall under disequilibrium unemployment

A
  • cyclical unemployment (demand deficient unemployment) which is unemployment in a recession due to lack of AD
  • real wave unemployment (classical unemployment)
20
Q

how would a fall in AD lead to higher cyclical unemployment

A
  • labours demand comes from the demand of goods and services
  • lower demand of goods and services = lower demand for labour
  • this increases unemployment
  • less AD , firms are not selling as much output, lower revenue
  • to keep profit margins at a decent level, firms will look to cut costs, cutting labour costs involve sacking workers
21
Q

what is real wage unemployment

A

where wages are forced above equilibrium in the labour market, creating an excess supply of labour
- higher wage rate means firms are less willing and able to employ, so there is a contraction of labour demand but workers are very willing to work at higher wages

22
Q

how can real wage unemployment happen

A
  • if governments increase minimum wage
  • having strong trade unions that push wages up
  • occurs when the real wage rate in the labor market is kept above the equilibrium wage rate, leading to a situation where there is an excess supply of labor (unemployment) compared to the demand for labor by employers.
23
Q

examples of equilibrium unemployment

A
  • this is unemployment that can occur when the labour market is in equilibrium
  • structural unemployment
  • frictional unemployment
  • seasonal unemployment
24
Q

what is structural unemployment

A
  • immobility of labour due to a long term change in the structure of the industry
  • immobility of labour can include occupational and geographical immobility
25
Q

what is frictional unemployment

A
  • in between jobs, when a worker has quit their job and is in the process of looking for a better one
26
Q

what is seasonal unemployment

A
  • when there is a temporary fall in demand for workers eg because of a seasonal change
27
Q

what is occupational immobility of labour

A

where there is a skills mismatch between skills a worker has and the jobs they are able to find with those skills

28
Q

what is geographical immobility of labour

A

when workers are not willing/able to move to where jobs exist, maybe because of personal preference, housing issues etc

29
Q

how might structural unemployment happen

A
  • technology advancements - this automated physical jobs reducing the need for physical workers
  • loss of comparative advantage - bigger decline in demand
  • modernisation/new industry growth - therefore a need for new skills for workers to learn, or an industry transferring from primary to secondary sector production
    but education system may not be keeping up with the new skills needed
30
Q

what is comparative advantage

A

when a company can produce a good at a lower cost compared to a similar industry abroad

31
Q

what is the natural rate of unemployment

A
  • unemployment that occurs when the labour market is in equilibrium
  • consists of structural, frictional and seasonal unemployment