A Fall in the Net Capital Outflow in
the Large Open Economy
Panel (a)
shows that a downward shift in the CF
schedule reduces the demand for
loans and thereby reduces the equilib-
rium interest rate. Panel (b) shows
that the level of the net capital out-
flow falls. Panel (c) shows that the
real exchange rate appreciates, and
net exports fall.
F I G U R E
5 - 2 3
Real interest
rate, r
Real
exchange
rate,
e
Net exports, NX
CF
2
CF
1
NX
2
e
2
e
1
NX
1
2. ...
causes the
interest
rate to
fall, ...
3. ... the
exchange
rate to
rise, ...
S
I
+ CF
r
CF(r)
NX(
e)
CF
Net capital
outflow, CF
Loanable funds, S, I
+ CF
r
1
r
2
4. ... and
net exports
to fall.
e
2
e
1
(a) The Market for Loanable Funds
(b) Net Capital Outflow
(c) The Market for Foreign Exchange
1. A fall in net
capital outflow ...
162
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P A R T I I
Classical Theory: The Economy in the Long Run
M O R E P R O B L E M S A N D A P P L I C A T I O N S
1.
If a war broke out abroad, it would affect the
U.S. economy in many ways. Use the model of
the large open economy to examine each of the
following effects of such a war. What happens in
the United States to saving, investment, the trade
balance, the interest rate, and the exchange rate?
(To keep things simple, consider each of the fol-
lowing effects separately.)
a. The U.S. government, fearing it may need to
enter the war, increases its purchases of mili-
tary equipment.
b. Other countries raise their demand for
high-tech weapons, a major export of the
United States.
c. The war makes U.S. firms uncertain about
the future, and the firms delay some
investment projects.
d. The war makes U.S. consumers uncertain
about the future, and the consumers save
more in response.
e. Americans become apprehensive about travel-
ing abroad, so more of them spend their vaca-
tions in the United States.
f. Foreign investors seek a safe haven for their
portfolios in the United States.
2.
On September 21, 1995, “House Speaker Newt
Gingrich threatened to send the United States
into default on its debt for the first time in the
nation’s history, to force the Clinton Administra-
tion to balance the budget on Republican
terms” (New York Times, September 22, 1995,
p. A1). That same day, the interest rate on
30-year U.S. government bonds rose from 6.46
to 6.55 percent, and the dollar fell in value from
102.7 to 99.0 yen. Use the model of the large
open economy to explain this event.
163
Unemployment
A man willing to work, and unable to find work, is perhaps the saddest sight
that fortune’s inequality exhibits under the sun.
—Thomas Carlyle
6
C H A P T E R
U
nemployment is the macroeconomic problem that affects people most
directly and severely. For most people, the loss of a job means a reduced
living standard and psychological distress. It is no surprise that unem-
ployment is a frequent topic of political debate and that politicians often claim
that their proposed policies would help create jobs.
Economists study unemployment to identify its causes and to help
improve the public policies that affect the unemployed. Some of these poli-
cies, such as job-training programs, help people find employment. Others,
such as unemployment insurance, alleviate some of the hardships that the
unemployed face. Still other policies affect the prevalence of unemployment
inadvertently. Laws mandating a high minimum wage, for instance, are wide-
ly thought to raise unemployment among the least skilled and experienced
members of the labor force.
Our discussions of the labor market so far have ignored unemployment. In
particular, the model of national income in Chapter 3 was built with the
assumption that the economy is always at full employment. In reality, not every-
one in the labor force has a job all the time: in all free-market economies, at any
moment, some people are unemployed.
Figure 6-1 shows the rate of unemployment—the percentage of the labor
force unemployed—in the United States since 1950. Although the rate of
unemployment fluctuates from year to year, it never gets even close to zero. The
average is between 5 and 6 percent, meaning that about 1 out of every 18 peo-
ple wanting a job does not have one.
In this chapter we begin our study of unemployment by discussing why
there is always some unemployment and what determines its level. We do not
study what determines the year-to-year fluctuations in the rate of unemploy-
ment until Part Four of this book, which examines short-run economic fluc-
tuations. Here we examine the determinants of the natural rate of
unemployment
—the average rate of unemployment around which the
economy fluctuates. The natural rate is the rate of unemployment toward
which the economy gravitates in the long run, given all the labor-market
imperfections that impede workers from instantly finding jobs.
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