The unemployment rate measures the percentage of people in the labour force who want a job but are not working.

Who Is in the Labor Force?

To be counted in the labor force, an individual must:

  • Be above 16 years old.
  • Be able and willing to work.
  • Not be institutionalized (e.g., in jail or long-term care).
  • Not be in the military, full-time education, or retired.

Types of Unemployment

  1. Frictional Unemployment:
    • Temporary unemployment or being between jobs.
    • Example: A college graduate looking for their first job.
  2. Structural Unemployment:
    • Occurs when workers’ skills become obsolete or no longer meet market demands.
    • Example: Automation replacing factory jobs.
    • Includes technological unemployment (caused by advancements in technology).
  3. Cyclical Unemployment:
    • Unemployment caused by a downturn in the business cycle (recession).
    • Example: Layoffs during an economic contraction.
  4. Seasonal Unemployment:
    • Occurs due to the time of year or nature of a job.
    • Example: Holiday retail workers or agricultural jobs.

Natural Rate of Unemployment (NRU)

The Natural Rate of Unemployment is the sum of frictional and structural unemployment, representing the β€œnormal” level of unemployment in a healthy economy. Full Employment is when the economy is at NRU, cyclical unemployment is zero.

Labor Force Participation Rate

The percentage of the working-age population in the labor force:

Hidden Problems with Unemployment Rate

  1. Discouraged Workers:
    • People who stop looking for work are no longer counted as unemployed, which can understate the unemployment rate.
  2. Underemployment:
    • Workers employed part-time or below their skill level are considered employed, which can overstate economic health.
  3. Inequality:
    • The unemployment rate does not show disparities by age, race, or region.

Unemployment is essential to long run equilibrium in the economy and is heavily discussed in Unit 3 (3.3 β€” Short-Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS), 3.4 β€” Long-Run Aggregate Supply (LRAS), 3.5 β€” Equilibrium in Aggregate Supply and Demand, 3.9 β€” Automatic Stabilizers)