2006 Unemployment
2006 Unemployment
2006 Unemployment
Gavin Cameron
University of Oxford
OUBEP 2006
introduction
• “When in any country the demand
for those who live by wages… is
continually increasing; when every
year furnishes employment for a
greater number than had been
employed the year before, the
workmen have no occasion to
combine to raise their wages. The
scarcity of hands occasions
competition among masters, who bid
against one another, in order to get
workmen…” Adam Smith (1776)
When real wages rise, the budget line rotates around point A (the endowment of time remains unchanged) and
becomes steeper. This allows both consumption and leisure to increase at the same time (income effect).
Because leisure is more expensive, however, some is given up (substitution effect). In the case depicted here,
the substitution effect dominates at first, but not in the extreme.
Aggregate
employment
employment
equilibrium wage
labour demand, Ld
natural rate
employment
labour demand, Ld
involuntary voluntary
employment
NAIRU
labour demand, Ld
labour supply Ls
competitive wage
equilibrium wage
labour demand Ld
Em Ec employment