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Tuesday, May 22, 2012
 welcome page » economy  » work, money, capital, production & prices  » labor market & employment policy 
The NAIRU: Still 'Not An Interesting Rate of Unemployment'
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Rod Cross and Dany Lang

The NAIRU: Still 'Not An Interesting Rate of Unemployment'

24 pages · 9.60 EUR
(September 2011)

 
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Abstract:

This paper assesses the Layard et al. (1991) NAIRU framework for explaining unemployment. Their approach is distinct from the natural rate of unemployment framework in that it postulates a short-run NAIRU influenced by 'hysteresis'. It is pointed out that this is not hysteresis in the meaning employed elsewhere, so an outline of what hysteresis actually implies for unemployment is offered. The main implication is that unemployment does not revert to a long-run ?natural rate? equilibrium, as claimed by Layard et al., but instead is shaped by the past extrema of dominant exogenous shocks. It is argued that this is a more useful approach to the explanation of equilibrium unemployment than the NAIRU, which, for its analytical and empirical flaws, can be considered to be 'not an interesting rate of unemployment'. The hysteretic alternative to the natural rate hypothesis can be called the DESIRU (dominant extrema, steady inflation, rate of unemployment).

JEL classifications: E10, E24

Keywords: NAIRU, hysteresis, path dependency


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Dany Lang
Dany Lang Adjunct Professor and Teaching Assistant at the Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Toulouse, University of Toulouse, France. [more titles]
Rod Cross
Economics Department, University of Strathclyde, Sir William Duncan Building, 130 Rottenrow, Glasgow G4 0GE, Scotland, e-mail: rod.cross@strath.ac.uk.