ECON 1BB3 Lecture 1: ECON 1BB3- Chapter 7

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ECON 1BB3- Thursday, January 17, 2019
Week ?
Chapter 7- Unemployment and Inflation
LO1- Unemployment
In addition to personal costs, unemployment imposes a cost on the economy as a whole because fewer
goods and services are produced. When those who are willing and able to work can’t find jobs, their
labour is lost forever.
Measuring Unemployment- we begin with the Canadian civilian noninstitutional adult population, which
consists of all civilians (non-military members) above or 15 years of age, except those in prison, mental
facilities, and homes for the aged.
The labour force are those 15 years of age or older who are either working or looking for work.
Those who want a job but cannot find one are unemployed
The unemployment rate- the number of unemployed people as a percentage of the labour force
Unemployment rate=Number of unemployedNumber in the Labour Force
Discourage workers- those who drop out of the labour force in frustration because they cannot find
work.
Because the official unemployment rate does not include discouraged workers and counts all
part-time workers as employed, it may underestimate the true extent of unemployment in the
economy
Labour force participation rate- the labour force as a percentage of the adult population
Labour force particpation rate=Number in labour forceAdult Population
Unemployment among Various Groups- the unemployment rate says nothing about who is unemployed
and for how long.
Education provides some insurance against unemployment, and it differs based on immigrant
status (unemployment is higher among recent immigrants then Canadian born people).
Unemployment is also higher among young workers because they enter the labour force with
little education and job experience, so they take unskilled workers and are the first laid off if the
economy slows down. They’re also more likely to move out of the labour force frequently as they
juggle school demands.
Unemployment Varies across regions and occupations- the unemployment rate varies by occupation;
professional and technical workers experience lower unemployment rates than blue-collared workers.
Sources of Unemployment-
1. Frictional Unemployment- unemployment that occurs because job seekers and employees need
time to find each other
2. Seasonal Unemployment- unemployment caused by seasonal changes in the demand for
certain kinds of labour
3. Structural Unemployment- unemployment because: 1) the skills demanded by employers do
not match those of the unemployed, or 2) the unemployed do not live where the jobs are
4. Cyclical Unemployment- unemployment that fluctuates with the business cycle,
increasing during contractions and decreasing during expansions
Duration of Unemployment- an unemployment rate tells us little of how long people have been
unemployed. Long-term unemployment refers to those who have been unemployed for a year or
longer
The Meaning of Full Employment- the economy is viewed as operating at full employment if there is no
cyclical unemployment, the amount of unemployment without the cyclical unemployment is called the
“natural rate” of unemployment, when economists talk about “full employment” they do not mean zero
unemployment, they mean low unemployment. Even when the economy is at full employment
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ECON 1BB3 Full Course Notes
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In addition to personal costs, unemployment imposes a cost on the economy as a whole because fewer goods and services are produced. When those who are willing and able to work can"t find jobs, their labour is lost forever. Measuring unemployment- we begin with the canadian civilian noninstitutional adult population, which consists of all civilians (non-military members) above or 15 years of age, except those in prison, mental facilities, and homes for the aged. The labour force are those 15 years of age or older who are either working or looking for work: those who want a job but cannot find one are unemployed. The unemployment rate- the number of unemployed people as a percentage of the labour force. Unemployment rate=number of unemployednumber in the labour force. Labour force participation rate- the labour force as a percentage of the adult population. Labour force particpation rate=number in labour forceadult population.

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