This paper by William Mitchell and Joan Muysken compares the employment and unemployment experience of the Australian and Dutch economies over the last 25 years. It aims to examine the evidence needed to support Modigliani\u27s (2000) view that in particular misguided government policy has been responsible for persistently high unemployment and the cumulative and permanent losses to social and economic well-being experienced by most OECD economies. In challenging the traditional NAIRU-view, which simplifies the rise in unemployment to a claim of reduced search effectiveness among the unemployed, the paper argues that the ultimate cause of unemployment is the failure of the two economies to produce enough jobs since the mid-1970s. Jobs hav...
web-site: http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/48/61/38697056.pdfInternational audienceThis paper explores t...
Unemployment is rising quite dramatically almost everywhere of the world. Undoubtedly, it is a very ...
Abstract This short paper aims to contribute to the debate on the causes and remedies for high ra...
textabstractIn this paper, a small macroeconomic model of the Dutch labour market is estimated. The ...
In this paper, we compare aggregate unemployment persistence across countries and over two decades c...
Nowadays, the long-standing relationship between effective demand and unemployment seems to be fadin...
The Netherlands and the United Kingdom have experienced a major decline in unemployment rates since ...
Nowadays, the long-standing relationship between effective demand and unemployment seems to be fadin...
The Netherlands and the United Kingdom have experienced a major decline in unemployment rates since ...
We are gratefill to Don Clark and Michael Jones fioin the ABS for their assistance with the data, an...
The Netherlands and the United Kingdom have experienced a major decline in unemployment rates since ...
The persistently high rate of unemployment has probably been Western Europe's most important economi...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of unemployment patterns in the OECD countries from the 19...
Bill Mitchell and Joan Muysken explore the evolution of economic theory from a construction of unemp...
Unemployment has been at unacceptable levels for at least twenty-five years and is probably Australi...
web-site: http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/48/61/38697056.pdfInternational audienceThis paper explores t...
Unemployment is rising quite dramatically almost everywhere of the world. Undoubtedly, it is a very ...
Abstract This short paper aims to contribute to the debate on the causes and remedies for high ra...
textabstractIn this paper, a small macroeconomic model of the Dutch labour market is estimated. The ...
In this paper, we compare aggregate unemployment persistence across countries and over two decades c...
Nowadays, the long-standing relationship between effective demand and unemployment seems to be fadin...
The Netherlands and the United Kingdom have experienced a major decline in unemployment rates since ...
Nowadays, the long-standing relationship between effective demand and unemployment seems to be fadin...
The Netherlands and the United Kingdom have experienced a major decline in unemployment rates since ...
We are gratefill to Don Clark and Michael Jones fioin the ABS for their assistance with the data, an...
The Netherlands and the United Kingdom have experienced a major decline in unemployment rates since ...
The persistently high rate of unemployment has probably been Western Europe's most important economi...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of unemployment patterns in the OECD countries from the 19...
Bill Mitchell and Joan Muysken explore the evolution of economic theory from a construction of unemp...
Unemployment has been at unacceptable levels for at least twenty-five years and is probably Australi...
web-site: http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/48/61/38697056.pdfInternational audienceThis paper explores t...
Unemployment is rising quite dramatically almost everywhere of the world. Undoubtedly, it is a very ...
Abstract This short paper aims to contribute to the debate on the causes and remedies for high ra...