Chapter 8: Q.9 (page 214)
How do you calculate the unemployment rate? How do you calculate the labor force participation rate?
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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Get started for freeWhat is the difference between being unemployed and being out of the labor force?
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.
Are U.S. unemployment rates distributed evenly across the population?
Beginning in the 1970s and continuing for three decades, women entered the U.S. labor force in a big way. If we assume that wages are sticky in a downward direction, but that around 1970 the demand for labor equaled the supply of labor at the current wage rate, what do you imagine happened to the wage rate, employment, and unemployment as a result of increased labor force participation?
Are all adults who do not hold jobs counted as unemployed?
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