The misery index (the unweighted sum of unemployment and inflation rates) was probably the first attempt to develop a single statistic to measure the level of a population’s economic malaise. In this letter, we develop a dynamic approach to decompose the misery index using two basic relations of modern macroeconomics: the expectations-augmented Phillips curve and Okun’s law. Our reformulation of the misery index is closer in spirit to Okun’s idea. However, we are able to offer an improved version of the index, mainly based on output and unemployment. Specifically, this new Okun’s index measures the level of economic discomfort as a function of three key factors: (1) the misery index in the previous period; (2) the output gap in growth rate ...
For the 20th century since the Depression, we find a strong correlation between a 'literary misery i...
This paper draws attention to the innovative but neglected work of Hans Singer on the dynamics of un...
Unemployment is a first-rate problem of most countries, both underdeveloped and the most developed c...
The misery index (the unweighted sum of unemployment and inflation rates) was probably the first att...
The great recession has refocused the attention on the consequences of economic fluctuations on popu...
The aim of the article is to present alternative measures of the economic system’s efficiency, takin...
This study adopts a dynamic approach to compute the level of economic distress in Nigeria. Quarterly...
The paper discusses an alternative measure for poverty assessment - the Misery Index. An author deve...
Unemployment and inflation lower well-being. The macroeconomist Arthur Okun characterized the negati...
The purpose of this paper is to develop a suitable misery index for Singapore. The index is used to ...
This paper suggests a variation of the IMO index (Okun's Misery Index), adapting it to markets with ...
This paper constructs state level Misery Indexes, incorporating recent data on Regional Pricing Pari...
This paper uses the gap between the level of an economy’s well-being and that of a people’s well-bei...
Figure 1.1 depicts Okun Misery Indexes (the sum of the inflation rate and unemployment rate) for the...
For the 20th century since the Depression, we find a strong correlation between a ‘literary misery i...
For the 20th century since the Depression, we find a strong correlation between a 'literary misery i...
This paper draws attention to the innovative but neglected work of Hans Singer on the dynamics of un...
Unemployment is a first-rate problem of most countries, both underdeveloped and the most developed c...
The misery index (the unweighted sum of unemployment and inflation rates) was probably the first att...
The great recession has refocused the attention on the consequences of economic fluctuations on popu...
The aim of the article is to present alternative measures of the economic system’s efficiency, takin...
This study adopts a dynamic approach to compute the level of economic distress in Nigeria. Quarterly...
The paper discusses an alternative measure for poverty assessment - the Misery Index. An author deve...
Unemployment and inflation lower well-being. The macroeconomist Arthur Okun characterized the negati...
The purpose of this paper is to develop a suitable misery index for Singapore. The index is used to ...
This paper suggests a variation of the IMO index (Okun's Misery Index), adapting it to markets with ...
This paper constructs state level Misery Indexes, incorporating recent data on Regional Pricing Pari...
This paper uses the gap between the level of an economy’s well-being and that of a people’s well-bei...
Figure 1.1 depicts Okun Misery Indexes (the sum of the inflation rate and unemployment rate) for the...
For the 20th century since the Depression, we find a strong correlation between a ‘literary misery i...
For the 20th century since the Depression, we find a strong correlation between a 'literary misery i...
This paper draws attention to the innovative but neglected work of Hans Singer on the dynamics of un...
Unemployment is a first-rate problem of most countries, both underdeveloped and the most developed c...