Ch. 9- Unemployment And The Demand For Labour Flashcards

1
Q

Unemployment

A

Occurs when someone wants to work but cannot find a job

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2
Q

Labour Force Survey (LFS)

A

Survey conducted by Statistics Canada which samples 50 000 households each month to calculate unemployment.

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3
Q

Labour Force

A

People who are employed or looking for employment (excluding retirees, full-time students, stay-at home parents, etc.)

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4
Q

Working-age population

A

Civilian, non-institutionalized (armed forces, prisoners, metal health facility) population aged 15+ who are available for work and are making specific efforts to be employed.

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5
Q

Labour-force participation rate

A

The fraction of the population that wants to be working

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6
Q

What condition(s) must an individual meet to be considered employed?

A

Spent some of the previous week at a paid job or working for profit

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7
Q

What condition(s) must an individual meet to be considered unemployed?

A

One condition must be true:
>They’ve been actively looking for work in the last 4 weeks but cannot find a job

> On temporary lay-off and expected to return to their job

> They have arrangements to start a new job in 4 weeks of less.

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8
Q

What condition(s) must an individual meet to be considered not in the labour force?

A

Neither employed nor unemployed

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9
Q

How accurately does unemployment rate represent the effect of a recession?

A

Unemployment rate understates the effect of a recession

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10
Q

Discouraged Workers

A

People who looked for work in the previous year, but quit looking because of the condition of the labour market.

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11
Q

Underemployed Workers

A

People who have part time jobs but would like to work full time or those who are overqualified for the position they hold.

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12
Q

What are the short-run and long-run problems of unemployment?

A

Short-run Problem: Cyclical Unemployment

Long-run Problem: Natural rate of unemployment

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13
Q

What are the 3 determinants of the Natural Rate of Unemployment?

A

Frictional Unemployment
Structural Unemployment
Real Wage (Classical) Unemployment

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14
Q

Frictional Unemployment

A

Caused by workers changing their location, job, or career. Used to explain relatively short spells of unemployment.

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15
Q

Structural Unemployment

A

Caused by a mismatch between skills workers have and skills that are in demand. Used to explain longer spells of unemployment.

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16
Q

Real Wage (Classical) Unemployment

A

Caused by wages being set above the equilibrium level (surplus of labour; only some workers are employed).

17
Q

What public policy can governments implement in response to unemployment?

A

> Government run employment agency (ex. Service Canada Centres)

> Public training programs to train workers in highly demanded skills

> Employment Insurance (EI)

18
Q

Employment Insurance (EI)

A

Money paid by the government to people who are unemployed. Helps unemployed workers recover; however, it can also disincentivize workers from finding a new job.

19
Q

Cyclical Unemployment

A

Caused by short-term economic fluctuations. As the economy grows, demand for workers increases because firms expand and vice versa. However, when the economy declines, unemployment goes up.

20
Q

Lagging/Trailing Indicator

A

It takes time for changes in the economy to translate into changes in employment.

21
Q

Labour Demand Curve

A

Represents the relationship between total quantity of labour demanded by all the firms in the economy and the wage rate.

In general, firms want to hire more labour when wages are lower and less labour when wages are higher

22
Q

Labour Supply Curve

A

Represents the relationship between total quantity of labour supplied by all the workers in the economy and the wage rate.

In general, workers want to supply more labour when wages are higher and less labour when wages are lower.

23
Q

How is unemployment represented in a labour supply/demand equilibrium?

A

Surplus of workers

24
Q

Why are wages not decreasing?

A

> Minimum wage laws set the wage above the equilibrium level

> Unions and Bargaining

> Efficiency Wages

25
Q

Sticky Wages

A

Wages are slow to respond to shifts in the economy

26
Q

Union

A

A worker association that bargains with employers over wages and working conditions

27
Q

Efficiency Wages

A

Firms set wages above the equilibrium wages in order to increase worker productivity (to provide incentive to be productive).

28
Q

Minimum Wage

A

Lowest wage a firm is legally allowed to pay its workers