This is the paper of a lecture held in honour of Rudolf Meidner, attempting to answer the following questions: How far can recovery go before the labour market becomes so tight that inflationary pressures once more get out of hand? In other words, what level of employment in future will be sustainable
Abstract In the 1980s, fifty years after the Great Depression industrial countries came again to ...
In the early 1990s the Swedish labour market was hit by the worst shock it experienced since the 193...
The macroeconomic principles behind the Swedish model were developed by two trade union economists, ...
Although the U.S. unemployment rate in 1998 was at its lowest level since the late 1960s, the nation...
With the end of the post-war boom in the early 1970s, the world economy has experienced large scale ...
This paper considers the meaning of full employment and attempts to gauge the appropriate level of "...
The paper argues that the 1990-93 recession in Sweden offered a natural experiment to test hypothese...
To honor the life work of Professor Sumner Rosen, this lecture examines approaches to promoting full...
This paper was originally delivered as a TSB Forum lecture in Glasgow on Thursday 28 October, 1993. ...
This paper briefly analyses the shifts in economic theory that have moved policy makers from unambig...
After the onset of the crisis, unemployment in Sweden increased markedly, though much less than expe...
The paper is divided into three parts, and a summary at the end. Part one explains how policies cond...
Abstract A most pressing problem before the world community today is that of unemployment and und...
Unemployment is at a low and stable level in Denmark. This achievement is often attributed to the so...
This lecture provides a general framework for analysing unemployment. For inflation to be stable, th...
Abstract In the 1980s, fifty years after the Great Depression industrial countries came again to ...
In the early 1990s the Swedish labour market was hit by the worst shock it experienced since the 193...
The macroeconomic principles behind the Swedish model were developed by two trade union economists, ...
Although the U.S. unemployment rate in 1998 was at its lowest level since the late 1960s, the nation...
With the end of the post-war boom in the early 1970s, the world economy has experienced large scale ...
This paper considers the meaning of full employment and attempts to gauge the appropriate level of "...
The paper argues that the 1990-93 recession in Sweden offered a natural experiment to test hypothese...
To honor the life work of Professor Sumner Rosen, this lecture examines approaches to promoting full...
This paper was originally delivered as a TSB Forum lecture in Glasgow on Thursday 28 October, 1993. ...
This paper briefly analyses the shifts in economic theory that have moved policy makers from unambig...
After the onset of the crisis, unemployment in Sweden increased markedly, though much less than expe...
The paper is divided into three parts, and a summary at the end. Part one explains how policies cond...
Abstract A most pressing problem before the world community today is that of unemployment and und...
Unemployment is at a low and stable level in Denmark. This achievement is often attributed to the so...
This lecture provides a general framework for analysing unemployment. For inflation to be stable, th...
Abstract In the 1980s, fifty years after the Great Depression industrial countries came again to ...
In the early 1990s the Swedish labour market was hit by the worst shock it experienced since the 193...
The macroeconomic principles behind the Swedish model were developed by two trade union economists, ...