EC140 Chapter Notes - Chapter 30: Frictional Unemployment, Market Clearing, Nairu

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Increases in the labour force are more or less matched by increases in employment. The unemployment rate fluctuates considerably because changes in the labour force are not exactly matched by changes in employment over the short term. Enough new jobs are created both to offset the number of jobs that have been eliminated and also to provide jobs for the growing labour force. The result is a net increase in employment in most years. The unemployment rate usually falls during periods of rapid economic growth. The unemployment rate usually rises during recessions or periods of slow growth. The amount of activity in the labour market is better reflected by the flows into and out of unemployment than by the overall unemployment rate. Cyclical unemployment is unemployment not due to frictional or structural factors and it is due to deviations of gdp from y.

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