This paper uses Icelandic data to assess standard methods for estimating the natural rate of unemployment. Surprisingly, estimating the path of the natural rate of unemployment for the period 1990-1998 produces a natural-rate path that mirrors the path taken by actual unemployment. The paper goes on to show that this result is misleading for three reasons: First, the unemployment spells of low-income workers appear to have been partly voluntary and their unemployment therefore did not exert much downward pressure on wages and prices, nor did their reemployment at the end of the 1990s threaten price stability. Second, the influx of foreign workers during the recent boom reduced inflationary pressures. Taken together, the two effects caused t...
In 1994, economists in the United States were virtually unanimous in believing that the unemployment...
This paper focuses upon the unique performance of the Icelandic labour market. It demonstrates, by ...
Some of the main goals of policy makers in almost every country are low inflation and low unemployme...
This paper uses an open economy version of a wage-price model with imperfect competition in goods an...
Iceland was a high inflation country from the second half of the seventies and until the middle of t...
Models of Icelandic inflation with unit labour costs and import prices as independent variables expl...
In recent years, the Beveridge curve has received increasing attention in labour market analysis. Th...
Many discussions about current macroeconomic events are based on the premise that inflation must acc...
Empirical evidence on inflation and unemployment suggests that they can be either positively or nega...
Unemployment in Norway stayed at a rather low level both in the sixties and the seventies. In the sa...
During the 1970s, industrial countries, including the US and continental Europa, experienced a combi...
This paper explains inflation and unemployment starting from new baseline models of price formation ...
This paper explains inflation and unemployment starting from new baseline models of price formation ...
This paper explains inflation and unemployment starting from new baseline models of price formation ...
Empirical evidence on inflation and unemployment suggests that they can be either positively or nega...
In 1994, economists in the United States were virtually unanimous in believing that the unemployment...
This paper focuses upon the unique performance of the Icelandic labour market. It demonstrates, by ...
Some of the main goals of policy makers in almost every country are low inflation and low unemployme...
This paper uses an open economy version of a wage-price model with imperfect competition in goods an...
Iceland was a high inflation country from the second half of the seventies and until the middle of t...
Models of Icelandic inflation with unit labour costs and import prices as independent variables expl...
In recent years, the Beveridge curve has received increasing attention in labour market analysis. Th...
Many discussions about current macroeconomic events are based on the premise that inflation must acc...
Empirical evidence on inflation and unemployment suggests that they can be either positively or nega...
Unemployment in Norway stayed at a rather low level both in the sixties and the seventies. In the sa...
During the 1970s, industrial countries, including the US and continental Europa, experienced a combi...
This paper explains inflation and unemployment starting from new baseline models of price formation ...
This paper explains inflation and unemployment starting from new baseline models of price formation ...
This paper explains inflation and unemployment starting from new baseline models of price formation ...
Empirical evidence on inflation and unemployment suggests that they can be either positively or nega...
In 1994, economists in the United States were virtually unanimous in believing that the unemployment...
This paper focuses upon the unique performance of the Icelandic labour market. It demonstrates, by ...
Some of the main goals of policy makers in almost every country are low inflation and low unemployme...